Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
corner top left block corner top right

Yerkes researchers create animal model of chronic stress

September 04, 2008

Better understanding neurohormonal causes of chronic stress and the body's reaction will allow researchers to create more effective treatment options for humans

In an effort to better understand how chronic stress affects the human body, researchers at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University, have created an animal model that shows how chronic stress affects behavior, physiology and reproduction.

Developing the animal model better positions the researchers to understand the neurohormonal causes of such stress and the body reaction in order to develop more effective treatment options for humans. The study is available in the current online edition of Molecular Psychiatry.

According to lead researcher Mark Wilson, PhD, chief of the Division of Psychobiology at Yerkes, "Chronic stress can lead to a number of behavioral changes and physical health problems, including anxiety, depression and infertility."

Via the animal model, the researchers found corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) is a key neurohormone involved in stress response. Wilson explains, "CRF is located in several different brain regions, serving different functions. Its release is important for our ability to adapt to every day stressors and to maintain our physical and emotional health."

In response to stress, CRF levels rise; CRF levels decrease when the stressor no longer is present. Chronic stress, however, increases the length and volume of expression of CRF in areas of the brain associated with fear and emotion, including the amygdala. Such chronic stress changes the body's response, and the resulting increased expression of CRF is thought to be the cause of such health-related stress problems including anxiety, depression and infertility.

To study the importance of CRF, the research team used a viral vector to increase the production of CRF in the amygdala of female rats.

"In our study, rats that continuously were exposed to CRF from this area of the brain experienced anxious and depressive behavior, decreased libido and disrupted ovarian cycles suggesting that persistent release of CRF such as occurs in chronic stress clearly affects multiple body systems," says Wilson. "These behavioral changes are similar to what we see in human females who are exposed to stressors on a daily basis."

Dr. Wilson and his research team next will attempt to learn more about the negative effects of increased CRF by examining actual molecular and cellular changes in specific brain areas targeted by the neurohormone. Knowing how CRF affects the brain positions the researchers to develop better treatment options.

Emory University




The Chronic Stress Crisis How Stress is Destroying Your Health and What You Can Do To Stop It

The Chronic Stress Crisis How Stress is Destroying Your Health and What You Can Do To Stop It
by N.D. William G. Timmins (Author)


The Chronic Stress Crisis explains in detail many common reasons for the current health crisis in the US, including over-consumption of grains, heavy metal toxicity, chemical hypersensitivity from exposure to environmental toxins, pesticides, herbicides and other sources of chemicals in our daily lives. I particularly enjoy this book because there is a strong emphasis on the Chronic Stress Response as being an underlying and immutable factor in the development of most disease processes. Emotional stress, dietary stress and the stress of the many burdens placed on our bodies by our modern lifestyles all culminate in the onset of diseases of modern times such as cancer, heart disease and autoimmune problems. This is a great resource to help provide an understanding of how you can take...

Heal Yourself: Using the Scientifically Proven Mind-Body Connection to Manage Chronic Pain, Depression, Cancer and More

Heal Yourself: Using the Scientifically Proven Mind-Body Connection to Manage Chronic Pain, Depression, Cancer and More
by Dr. Lynne Zimmerman (Author)


Fascinating ongoing research in quantum physics and the brain s neuroplasticity has proven that, by employing simple sensory and mental exercises, individuals can change the chemical messages the brain sends to every muscle, organ, and system in the body. People can, in effect, remap their brain s neural circuitry to promote all types of healing, including for chronic pain, depression, cancer, and more.
In Heal Yourself, Dr. Lynne Zimmerman explains in lay language the cutting-edge science behind the human brain s ability to reconfigure its own electrochemical format and demonstrates how readers can direct changes in their brain map to alter the cellular codes that help determine immune strength, emotional states, degenerative states (affecting the ability to stay youthful), and even...

Inflammation, Lifestyle and Chronic Diseases: The Silent Link (Oxidative Stress and Disease)

Inflammation, Lifestyle and Chronic Diseases: The Silent Link (Oxidative Stress and Disease)
by Bharat B. Aggarwal (Editor), Sunil Krishnan (Editor), Sushovan Guha (Editor)


Oxidative stress and inflammation are among the most important factors of disease. Chronic infections, obesity, alcohol and tobacco usage, radiation, environmental pollutants, and high-calorie diets have been recognized as major risk factors for a variety of chronic diseases from cancer to metabolic diseases. All these risk factors are linked to chronic diseases through inflammation. While short-term, acute inflammation generated by the immune system serves a therapeutic role, chronic low-level inflammation that may persist "silently" for decades is responsible for chronic diseases. Inflammation, Lifestyle, and Chronic Diseases: The Silent Link describes the role of dysregulated inflammation in persistent and recurring diseases. It investigates links to lifestyle and presents research...

Miss Diagnosed: Unraveling Chronic Stress

Miss Diagnosed: Unraveling Chronic Stress
by Erin Bell (Author)


In today’s highly stressful world, most women find themselves looking for just one more hour in a twenty-four-hour day. If we could only get that extra hour, what would we do with it? Stress continues to be a major factor in our lives. Like the thinning ozone layer or tax increases, we usually just “live with it.” Women in particular live high-stress lifestyles and don’t completely understand how stress affects them. They are very aware of how they feel under stress but don’t realize how it could be ruining their health and their lives. Since stress damage cannot be measured with any certainty, it continues to challenge medical research. But in this field, women’s health needs to be clearly distinguished from men’s health. If we are going to try to comprehend and...

The Pain Detective, Every Ache Tells a Story: Understanding How Stress and Emotional Hurt Become Chronic Physical Pain (The Praeger Series on Contemporary Health and Living)

The Pain Detective, Every Ache Tells a Story: Understanding How Stress and Emotional Hurt Become Chronic Physical Pain (The Praeger Series on Contemporary Health and Living)
by Hillel M. Finestone (Author)


"Pain is everywhere and everyone is talking about it," says Dr. Hillel Finestone, M.D., a researcher and rehabilitation specialist whose work has been featured in publications as diverse as The Lancet, and USA Today. The key to understanding causes and solutions for many apparently mysterious, recurring aches, he explains, lies in understanding the mind-body relationship and the "real meaning" behind symptoms with no immediately obvious cause.Taking the reader into several diagnostic sessions to illustrate what he sees as a "detective" process to find the source of pain, Finestone explains how psychological and social issues can influence health and healing, for better or worse. Low back and neck pain, fibromyalgia and even work related pains are delved into.In addition to vignettes that...

Coping with Chronic Stress (Springer Series on Stress and Coping)

Coping with Chronic Stress (Springer Series on Stress and Coping)
by Benjamin H. Gottlieb (Editor)


The contributors to this unique volume present pioneering approaches to the assessment of coping efforts and resources. Addressing such issues as whether coping with chronic problems differs in form, emphasis, or function from coping with acute events, they reveal the factors that govern the expression, trajectory, and effects of coping with chronic stress. Notable attention is given to the development of theory as a basis for future investigations.

A Natural Approach to Fibromyalgia and Chronic Pain - Understand Why You Hurt All Over.

A Natural Approach to Fibromyalgia and Chronic Pain - Understand Why You Hurt All Over.
by Pain & Stress Publications


There is natural help for fibromyalgia. A door has opened on a new field of Nutritional Medicine--the replacement of key nutrients in the brain and body.

The goal of "A Natural Approach to Fibromyalgia and Chronic Pain" is to provide the latest information, to help you find the natural alternative that gives you as much relief as possible while nourishing your depleted brain.

When you address what is deficient in the body and brain, your pain diminishes, and your healing begins. This book tells you why you are deficient and what nutrients you can take for relief you never thought possible.

The nutritional approach outlined in this book offers hope and relief without the side effects experienced with medications. Do not expect a cure from medications....

A Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Workbook

A Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Workbook
by Bob Stahl PhD (Author), Elisha Goldstein PhD (Author), Saki Santorelli EdD MA (Afterword), Jon Kabat-Zinn PhD (Afterword)


Stress and pain are nearly unavoidable in our daily lives; they are part of the human condition. This stress can often leave us feeling irritable, tense, overwhelmed, and burned-out. The key to maintaining balance is responding to stress not with frustration and self-criticism, but with mindful, nonjudgmental awareness of our bodies and minds. Impossible? Actually, it's easier than it seems.In just weeks, you can learn mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), a clinically proven program for alleviating stress, anxiety, panic, depression, chronic pain, and a wide range of medical conditions. Taught in classes and clinics worldwide, this powerful approach shows you how to focus on the present moment in order to permanently change the way you handle stress. As you work through A...

Some etiopathogenetic aspects of chronic prostatitis: mycoplasmas, coryneform  bacteria and oxidative stress

Some etiopathogenetic aspects of chronic prostatitis: mycoplasmas, coryneform bacteria and oxidative stress
by Silver Türk (Author), Tiiu Kullisaar (Author), Paul Korrovits (Author), Kristo Ausmees (Author), Margus Punab (Author), Reet Mändar (Author)


This is a book about the etiopathogenesis of chronic prostatitis, based on the PhD thesis.

Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress Syndrome

Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress Syndrome
by James L. Wilson (Author), Johnathan V. Wright (Foreword)


This is an incredibly informative and reader-friendly book about a common debilitating medical condition that goes largely undiagnosed and untreated. ADRENAL FATIGUE: The 21st Century Stress Syndrome is a very empowering work cram-packed with vital information about a condition that very likely affects millions of people.

corner bottom left corner bottom right
© 2012 BrightSurf.com