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Chapter 6. The Effects of Stress on the Body and Mind. Overview. This chapter Explains the role of two types of psychosomatic illnesses on disease Examines the relationship of acute stress responses to the development of physical and mental illnesses
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Chapter 6 The Effects of Stress on the Body and Mind
Overview • This chapter • Explains the role of two types of psychosomatic illnesses on disease • Examines the relationship of acute stress responses to the development of physical and mental illnesses • Explores the impact of chronic stress on the development of physical and mental illnesses
Outline • From stress to disease: The medical model and psychosomatic models • The effects of acute, high-level stress on physical and psychological disease • The effects of chronic, low-level stress on physical and psychological disease, including suicide
From Stress to Disease: The Medical Model • Separates mind and body • Used to explain disease and treatment • Koch’s Postulates: Every disease has a single etiologic agent, a microorganism • No recognition of interaction of mind and body • GAS model clearly includes interaction of mind and body
Psychosomatic Disease Models • Term coined by Philip Deutsch to illustrate the interaction between the mind and body in the disease process • All illnesses involve mental processes • Common misunderstanding: belief that psychosomatic diseases are all in one’s head
Psychosomatic Models • Selye’s GAS model was a clear break from a medical model approach to disease development • Everly & Lating identified six major psychophysiologic disease models that expand on Seyle’s research • Lachman’s Model • Sternbach’s Model • Kraus & Raab’s Hypokinetic Disease Model • Schwartz’ Dysregulation Model • Alexander’s Conflict Theory Model • Everly & Benson’s Disorders of Arousal Model
Everly & Benson’s Disorders of Arousal Model (Fig. 6-1 in Text) • Potential stressors trigger limbic system arousal (can become Limbic Hypersensitivity Phenomenon, or LHP) • Limbic arousal triggers neurological, neuronendocrine, and endocrine stress axes • Overstimulation of those axes triggers stress arousal (can become arousal disorder)
Two Categories of Psychosomatic Disease • Psychogenic disease • No disease-causing pathogen • Occurs when chronic stress response alters structure and function of body • Examples: colitis, atherosclerosis
Two Forms of Psychosomatic Disease (continued) • Somatogenic disease • A causative organism exists • The long-term effects of the stress response weaken the body’s defenses • Example: Mononucleosis
Acute Stress • Alarm-phase stress • State of complete mental and physical readiness • Prepared to fight or flee • Result is fatigue
Acute Stress Effects on Physical Illness • The body suffers no harm when the lifestyle is balanced • Proper nutrition and exercise • Adequate rest • The greater the frequency of high level stress, the greater the need for rest
Acute Stress Effects on Psychological Illness • Anxiety disorders • Panic attacks • Acute stress disorder • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Chronic Stress • Long-term resistance-phase stress response • General wear and tear on body • Body parts and systems forced to work for long periods without adequate rest • Result is malfunction and breakdown
Effects of Chronic, Low-Level Stress on Physical Illness • The effects are most clear in psychogenic diseases • Five body systems are most susceptible • Endocrine • Muscular • Cardiovascular • Immune • Digestive
Chronic Stress and the Endocrine System • The endocrine system perpetuates low-level stress response • Responsible for a wide range of other functions • Chronic stress can interfere with and shut down the endocrine system
Chronic Stress and the Endocrine System (continued) • The role of three hormones • Epinephrine • Norepinephrine • Cortisol
Chronic Stress and the Endocrine System (continued) • Epinephrine production causes blood vessels to constrict • Forces heart to pump under greater pressure • Chronic increase in blood pressure results in hypertension • Hypertension is primary risk factor for stroke and heart attack
Chronic Stress and the Endocrine System (continued) • Norepinephrine production disturbs platelets and red blood cells • Causes damage to endothelium • Precursor to atherosclerosis • Converts testosterone into estradiol • Estradiol not completely understood • Often elevated in men who have heart attacks
Chronic Stress and the Endocrine System (continued) • Cortisol production inhibits breakdown of epinephrine and norepinephrine • Interferes with the body’s ability to relax • Increases blood cholesterol and fat levels • These are recognized risk factors for heart disease
Chronic Stress and the Endocrine System (continued) • Sexual disorders • Men under chronic stress • Show reduced levels of testosterone • Demonstrate reduced sexual desire • Return to normal when stress is removed • Women under chronic stress • Exhibit increased premenstrual syndrome (PMS) symptoms • Research about causes and treatment lack consistency
Chronic Stress and the Muscular System • Stress affects all three types of muscle tissue • Skeletal muscles • Smooth (internal organ) muscles • Cardiac (heart) muscle
Chronic Stress and the Muscular System (continued) • Stress causes a chronic state of muscle contraction called bracing • Skeletal muscles bracing results • Headache • Backache and muscle pain • Temporomandibular-joint (TMJ) syndrome
Chronic Stress and the Muscular System (continued) • Smooth muscles bracing results • A chronic state of internal tension • Stomach ache and diarrhea • Hypertension • Cardiac muscle bracing results • Angina-like symptoms (chest pains)
Chronic Stress and the Cardiovascular System (continued) • The cardiovascular system is a closed system with three components • Heart • Blood vessels • Blood • Main purpose is to provide food and oxygen to cells and to remove waste
Chronic Stress and the Cardiovascular System (continued) • Stress • Accelerates the heart rate • Makes the heart pump faster and under greater pressure than necessary • Increases cholesterol and fats in blood • Causes atherosclerosis in blood vessels
Chronic Stress and the Immune System • The immune system performs five primary functions • Identifies foreign substances such as germs • Attacks these invaders • Prevents reinfection from these invaders • Destroys mutant cells • Resists recurrent chronic infections
Chronic Stress and the Immune System (continued) • Chronic stress can alter the immune system • Depletes nutritional factors associated with immunity • Causes an imbalance in the system • Weakens T cells • Exerts a general immunosuppressive effect
Chronic Stress and the Digestive System • Stress upsets the digestive process • Smooth muscle tension • Excessive stomach acids • Spasms of esophagus and colon • Ulcers • Incomplete digestion
Effects of Chronic Stress on Psychological Illness • Stress is related to many psychological factors • Burnout • Anxiety disorders • Stress-related specific phobia • Stress-related generalized anxiety disorder • Mood disorders • Stress-related major depressive disorder, dysthymic disorder, and bipolar disorders (and seasonal pattern specifier condition)
Stress and Suicide • Suicide: a permanent solution to a temporary problem • People who take their own lives don’t see options • Suicide rates for adolescents and college-age people are rising • Three stress-related suicide risk factors • Depression • Major loss • Stressful life events
Chapter 6: The Effects of Stress on the Body and Mind • Summary