Stress (psychology).
Publié le 10/05/2013
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blood flow is diverted from the internal organs and skin to the brain and muscles.
Breathing speeds up, the pupils dilate, and perspiration increases.
This reaction issometimes called the fight-or-flight response because it energizes the body to either confront or flee from a threat.
Another part of the stress response involves the hypothalamus and the pituitary gland, parts of the brain that are important in regulating hormones and many otherbodily functions.
In times of stress, the hypothalamus directs the pituitary gland to secrete adrenocorticotropic hormone.
This hormone, in turn, stimulates the outerlayer, or cortex, of the adrenal glands to release glucocorticoids, primarily the stress hormone cortisol ( see Hydrocortisone).
Cortisol helps the body access fats and carbohydrates to fuel the fight-or-flight response.
Canadian scientist Hans Selye was one of the first people to study the stress response.
As a medical student, Selye noticed that patients with quite different illnessesshared many of the same symptoms, such as muscle weakness, weight loss, and apathy.
Selye believed these symptoms might be part of a general response by thebody to stress.
In the 1930s Selye studied the reactions of laboratory rats to a variety of physical stressors, such as heat, cold, poisons, strenuous exercise, and electricshock.
He found that the different stressors all produced a similar response: enlargement of the adrenal glands, shrinkage of the thymus gland (a gland involved in theimmune response), and bleeding stomach ulcers.
Selye proposed a three-stage model of the stress response, which he termed the general adaptation syndrome.
The three stages in Selye’s model are alarm, resistance, and exhaustion.
The alarm stage is a generalized state of arousal during the body’s initial response to the stressor.
In the resistance stage, the body adapts to the stressor and continues to resist it with a high level of physiological arousal.
When the stress persists for a long time, and the body is chronically overactive,resistance fails and the body moves to the exhaustion stage. In this stage, the body is vulnerable to disease and even death.
B Disease
Physicians increasingly acknowledge that stress is a contributing factor in a wide variety of health problems.
These problems include cardiovascular disorders such ashypertension (high blood pressure); coronary heart disease (coronary atherosclerosis, or narrowing of the heart’s arteries); and gastrointestinal disorders, such asulcers.
Stress also appears to be a risk factor in cancer, chronic pain problems, and many other health disorders.
See Stress-Related Disorders.
Researchers have clearly identified stress, and specifically a person's characteristic way of responding to stress, as a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases.
The releaseof stress hormones has a cumulative negative effect on the heart and blood vessels.
Cortisol, for example, increases blood pressure, which can damage the inside wallsof blood vessels.
It also increases the free fatty acids in the bloodstream, which in turn leads to plaque buildup on the lining of the blood vessels.
As the blood vesselsnarrow over time it becomes increasingly difficult for the heart to pump sufficient blood through them.
People with certain personality types seem to be physiologically overresponsive to stress and therefore more vulnerable to heart disease.
For example, the so-calledType A personality is characterized by competitiveness, impatience, and hostility.
When Type A people experience stress, their heart rate and blood pressure climbhigher and recovery takes longer than with more easygoing people.
The most “toxic” personality traits of Type A people are frequent reactions of hostility and anger.These traits are correlated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease.
Stress also appears to influence the development of cancer, but the relationship is not as well established as it is for cardiovascular diseases.
There is a moderatepositive correlation between extent of exposure to life stressors and cancer—the more stressors, the greater the likelihood of cancer.
In addition, a tendency to copewith unpleasant events in a rigid, unemotional manner is associated with the development and progression of cancer.
C Decreased Immune Response
Ordinarily the immune system is a marvel of precision.
It protects the body from disease by seeking out and destroying foreign invaders, such as viruses and bacteria.But there is substantial evidence that stress suppresses the activity of the immune system, leaving an organism more susceptible to infectious diseases.
An organismwith a weakened immune system is also less able to control naturally occurring mutant cells that overproduce and lead to cancer.
Numerous studies have linked stress with decreased immune response.
For example, when laboratory animals are physically restrained, exposed to inescapable electricshocks, or subjected to overcrowding, loud noises, or maternal separation, they show decreased immune system activity.
Researchers have reported similar findings forhumans.
One study, for example, found weakened immune response in people whose spouses had just died.
Other studies have documented weakened immuneresponses among students taking final examinations; people who are severely deprived of sleep; recently divorced or separated men and women; people caring for afamily member with Alzheimer’s disease; and people who have recently lost their jobs.
Stress appears to depress immune function in two main ways.
First, when people experience stress, they more often engage in behaviors that have adverse effects ontheir health: cigarette smoking, using more alcohol or drugs, sleeping less, exercising less, and eating poorly.
In addition, stress may alter the immune system directlythrough hormonal changes.
Research indicates that glucocorticoids—hormones that are secreted by the adrenal glands during the stress response—actively suppressthe body’s immune system.
At one time scientists believed the immune system functioned more or less as an independent system of the body.
They now know that the immune system does notoperate by itself, but interacts closely with other bodily systems.
The field of psychoneuroimmunology focuses on the relationship between psychological influences (such as stress), the nervous system, and the immune system.
D Mental Illness
Stress influences mental health as well as physical health.
People who experience a high level of stress for a long time—and who cope poorly with this stress—maybecome irritable, socially withdrawn, and emotionally unstable.
They may also have difficulty concentrating and solving problems.
Some people under intense andprolonged stress may start to suffer from extreme anxiety, depression, or other severe emotional problems.
Anxiety disorders caused by stress may include generalizedanxiety disorder, phobias, panic disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
People who survive catastrophes sometimes develop an anxiety disorder called post-traumatic stress disorder.
They reexperience the traumatic event again and again in dreams and in disturbing memories or flashbacks during the day.
They often seememotionally numb and may be easily startled or angered.
IV COPING WITH STRESS
Coping with stress means using thoughts and actions to deal with stressful situations and lower our stress levels.
Many people have a characteristic way of coping withstress based on their personality.
People who cope well with stress tend to believe they can personally influence what happens to them.
They usually make morepositive statements about themselves, resist frustration, remain optimistic, and persevere even under extremely adverse circumstances.
Most importantly, they choosethe appropriate strategies to cope with the stressors they confront.
Conversely, people who cope poorly with stress tend to have somewhat opposite personalitycharacteristics, such as lower self-esteem and a pessimistic outlook on life..
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