Stress.. interaction between health, psychology and
the environment: environmental health.
The following information along with the video, should be
used in your final city plan development. As stress and health issues are critical
concerns of your population, how can your knowledge of this topic help you in
designing your city and its support systems so to decrease
stress and increase populaiton health and satisfaction.
Part of the solution may come through physical city attributes: green spaces,
spaces which encourage excercise naturally, places for mediation and so on.
Part of the solution may come through city support and educational services
which help individuals recognize and deal more effectivley with stress.
In your final report, note where stresses may arise based on the characteristics
of your population and your solutions.
The following notes come from portions of an article taken from National Institute
of Heath.
Stress System Malfunction Could Lead to Serious, Life Threatening Disease
- Whether from a charging lion, or a pending deadline, the body’s response
to stress can be both helpful and harmful. The stress response gives us the
strength and speed to ward off or flee from an impending threat. But when
it persists, stress can put us at risk for obesity, heart disease, cancer,
and a variety of other illnesses.
Perhaps the greatest understanding of stress and its effects has resulted
from a theory by George Chrousos, M.D., Chief of the Pediatric and Reproductive
Endocrinology Branch at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
(NICHD), and Philip Gold, MD, of the Clinical Neuroendocrinology Branch at
the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).
Introduction
A threat to your life or safety triggers a primal physical response from the
body, leaving you breathless, heart pounding, and mind racing. From deep within
your brain, a chemical signal speeds stress hormones through the bloodstream,
priming your body to be alert and ready to escape danger. Concentration becomes
more focused, reaction time faster, and strength and agility increase. When
the stressful situation ends, hormonal signals switch off the stress response
and the body returns to normal.
But in our modern society, stress doesn’t always let up. Many of us
now harbor anxiety and worry about daily events and relationships. Stress
hormones continue to wash through the system in high levels, never leaving
the blood and tissues. And so, the stress response that once gave ancient
people the speed and endurance to escape life-threatening dangers runs constantly
in many modern people and never shuts down.
Research now shows that such long-term activation of the stress system can
have a hazardous, even lethal effect on the body, increasing risk of obesity,
heart disease, depression, and a variety of other illnesses.
Much of the current understanding of stress and its effects has resulted from
the theory by Drs. Chrousos and Gold.
Their theory explains the complex interplay between the nervous system
and stress hormones — the hormonal system known as the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal
(HPA) axis. Over the past 20 years, Dr. Chrousos and his colleagues
have employed the theory to understand a variety of stress-related
conditions, including depression, Cushing’s syndrome, anorexia nervosa,
and chronic fatigue syndrome.
The Stress Circuit
The HPA axis is a feedback loop by which signals from the brain trigger the
release of hormones needed to respond to stress. Because of its function,
the HPA axis is also sometimes called the “stress circuit.”
Briefly, in response to a stress, the brain region known as the hypothalamus
releases corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH). In turn, CRH acts on the pituitary
gland, just beneath the brain, triggering the release of another hormone,
adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) into the bloodstream. Next, ACTH signals the adrenal
glands, which sit atop the kidneys, to release a number of hormonal compounds.
These compounds include epinephrine (formerly known as adrenaline), Norepinephrine
(formerly known as noradrenaline) and cortisol. All three hormones enable
the body to respond to a threat. Epinephrine increases blood pressure and
heart rate, diverts blood to the muscles, and speeds reaction time. Cortisol,
also known as glucocorticoid, releases sugar (in the form of glucose) from
the body reserves so that this essential fuel can be used to power the muscles
and the brain.
Normally, cortisol also exerts a feedback effect to shut down the stress response
after the threat has passed, acting upon the hypothalamus and causing it to
stop producing CRH.
This stress circuit affects systems throughout the body. The hormones of the
HPA axis exert their effect on the autonomic nervous system, which controls
such vital functions as heart rate, blood pressure, and digestion.
The HPA axis also communicates with several regions of the brain,
including the limbic system, which controls motivation and mood, with the
amygdala, which generates fear in response to danger, and with the hippocampus,
which plays an important part in memory formation as well as in mood and motivation.
In addition, the HPA axis is also connected with brain regions that control
body temperature, suppress appetite, and control pain.
Similarly, the HPA axis also interacts with various other glandular systems,
among them those producing reproductive hormones, growth hormones, and thyroid
hormones. Once activated, the stress response switches off the hormonal systems
regulating growth, reproduction, metabolism, and immunity. Short term, the
response is helpful, allowing us to divert biochemical resources to dealing
with the threat.
Stress, heredity, and the environment
According to Dr. Chrousos, this stress response varies from person to person.
Presumably, it is partially influenced by heredity. For example, in most people
the HPA axis probably functions appropriately enough, allowing the body to
respond to a threat, and switching off when the threat has passed. Due to
differences in the genes that control the HPA axis, however, other people
may fail to have a strong enough response to a threat, while still others
may over respond to even minor threats.
Beyond biological differences, the HPA axis also can alter its functioning
in response to environmental influences. The HPA axis may permanently be altered
as a result of extreme stress at any time during the life cycle — during
adulthood, adolescence, early childhood, or even in the womb.
If there are major stresses in early childhood, the HPA feedback loop becomes
stronger and stronger with each new stressful experience. This results in
an individual who, by adulthood, has an extremely sensitive stress circuit
in place. In life threatening situations — such as life in an area torn
by war — this exaggerated response would help an individual to survive.
In contemporary society, however, it usually causes the individual to overreact
hormonally to comparatively minor situations.
Effects on the body
Stress and the Reproductive system
Stress suppresses the reproductive system at various levels, says Dr. Chrousos.
First, CRH prevents the release of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH),
the “master” hormone that signals a cascade of hormones that direct
reproduction and sexual behavior. Similarly, cortisol and related glucocorticoid
hormones not only inhibit the release of GnRH, but also the release
of luteinizing hormone, which prompts ovulation and sperm release. Glucocorticoids
also inhibit the testes and ovaries directly, hindering production of the
male and female sex hormones testosterone, estrogen, and progesterone.
The HPA overactivity that results from chronic stress has been shown to inhibit
reproductive functioning in anorexia nervosa and in starvation, as well as
in highly trained ballet dancers and runners. For example, in one study, Chrousos
found that men who ran more than 45 miles per week produced high levels of
ACTH and cortisol in response to the stress of extreme exercise. These male
runners had low LH and testosterone levels. Other studies have shown that
women undertaking extreme exercise regimens had ceased ovulating and menstruating.
However, the interaction between the HPA axis and the reproductive system
is also a two way street. The female hormone estrogen exerts partial control
of the gene that stimulates CRH production. This may explain, why, on average,
women have slightly elevated cortisol levels. In turn, higher cortisol levels,
in combination with other, as yet unknown, factors, may be the reason why
women are more vulnerable than men to depression, anorexia nervosa, panic
disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, and autoimmune diseases like lupus
and rheumatoid arthritis.
Growth and stress
The hormones of the HPA axis also influence hormones needed for growth. Prolonged
HPA activation will hinder the release of growth
hormone and insulin-like growth
factor 1 (IGF-1), both of which are essential for normal growth.
Glucocorticoids released during prolonged stress also cause tissues to be
less likely to respond to IGF-1. Children with Cushing’s syndrome —
which results in high glucocorticoid levels — lose about 7.5 to 8.0
centimeters from their adult height.
Similarly, premature infants are at an increased
risk for growth retardation. The stress of surviving in an
environment for which they are not yet suited, combined with the prolonged
stress of hospitalization in the intensive care unit, presumably activates
the HPA axis. Growth retarded fetuses also have higher levels of CRH, ACTH,
and cortisol, probably resulting from stress in the womb or exposure to maternal
stress hormones.
Old research has also shown that the stress from emotional deprivation or
psychological harassment may result in the short stature and delayed physical
maturity of the condition known as psychosocial short stature (PSS).
PSS was first discovered in orphanages, in infants who failed to thrive and
grow. When these children were placed in caring environments in which they
received sufficient attention, their growth resumed. The children’s
cortisol levels were abnormally low, a seeming contradiction, which Chrousos
investigated by studying a small, non-human primate, the common marmoset.
These monkeys live in small family groups in which infants are cared for by
both parents. As in human society, the infants are sometimes well cared for,
but sometimes abused. Like humans, the abused monkeys showed evidence of PSS.
The researchers determined that the stressed and abused monkeys appeared to
respond normally to stress, but seemed unable to “switch off”
the stress response by secreting appropriate cortisol levels, thereby remaining
in a state of prolonged stress arousal as compared to their peers.
The gastrointestinal tract and stress
As many of us know, stress can also result in digestive problems. The stress
circuit influences the stomach and intestines in several ways.
- First, CRH directly hinders the release of stomach acid and emptying of
the stomach. Moreover, CRH also directly stimulates the colon, speeding up
the emptying of its contents. In addition to the effects of CRH alone on the
stomach, the entire HPA axis, through the autonomic nervous system, also
hinders stomach acid secretion and emptying, as well as increasing
the movement of the colon.
- Also, continual, high levels of cortisol — as occur in some forms
of depression, or during chronic psychological stress —can
increase appetite and lead to weight gain. Rats given high
doses of cortisol for long periods had increased appetites and had larger
stores of abdominal fat. The rats also ate heavily when they would normally
have been inactive. Overeating at night is also common among people who are
under stress.
The immune system and stress
- The HPA axis also interacts with the immune
system, making you more vulnerable to colds and flu, fatigue and infections.
In response to an infection, or an inflammatory disorder like rheumatoid arthritis,
cells of the immune system produce three substances that cause inflammation:
interleukin 1 (IL-1), interleukin 6 (IL-6), and tumor necrosis factor (TNF).
These substances, working either singly or in combination with each other,
cause the release of CRH. IL-6 also promotes the release of ACTH and cortisol.
Cortisol and other compounds then suppress the release of IL-1, IL-6, and
TNF, in the process switching off the inflammatory response.
Ideally, stress hormones damp down an immune response that has run its course.
When the HPA axis is continually running at a high level, however, that damping
down can have a down side, leading to decreased ability to release the interleukins
and fight infection.
In addition, the high cortisol levels resulting from prolonged stress could
serve to make the body more susceptible to disease, by switching off disease-fighting
white blood cells. Although the necessary studies have not yet been conducted,
Dr. Chrousos considers it possible that this same deactivation of white blood
cells might also increase the risk for certain types of cancer.
- Conversely, there is evidence that a depressed HPA Axis, resulting in too
little corticosteroid, can lead to a hyperactive
immune system and increased risk of developing autoimmune diseases —
diseases in which the immune system attacks the body’s own cells. Overactivation
of the antibody-producing B cells may aggravate conditions like lupus, which
result from an antibody attack on the body’s own tissues.
Stress-Related Disorders
One of the major disorders characteristic of an overactive HPA axis
is melancholic depression.
Chrousos’ research has shown that people with depression have a
blunted ability to “counterregulate,” or adapt to the negative feedback
of increases in cortisol. The body turns on the “fight or flight”
response, but is prevented from turning it off again. This produces constant
anxiety and overreaction to stimulation, followed by the paradoxical response
called “learned helplessness,” in
which victims apparently lose all motivation.
Hallmarks of this form of depression are anxiety,
loss of appetite, loss of sex drive, rapid heart beat, high blood pressure,
and high cholesterol and triglyceride levels. People with this
condition tend to produce higher-than-normal levels of CRH. The high levels
of CRH are probably due to a combination of environmental and hereditary causes,
depending on the person affected.
However, rather than producing higher amounts of ACTH in response to CRH, depressed
people produce smaller amounts of this substance, presumably because their hippocampuses
have become less sensitive to the higher amounts of CRH. In an apparent attempt
to switch off excess CRH production, the systems of people with melancholic
depression also produce high levels of cortisol. However, by-products of cortisol,
produced in response to high levels of the substance, also depress brain cell
activity. These by-products serve as sedatives, and perhaps contribute to the
overall feeling of depression.
Other conditions are also associated with high levels of CRH and cortisol. These
include anorexia nervosa, malnutrition, obsessive-compulsive disorder, anxiety
disorder, alcoholism, alcohol and narcotic withdrawal, poorly controlled diabetes,
childhood sexual abuse, and hyperthyroidism.
The excessive amount of the stress hormone cortisol produced in patients with
any of these conditions is responsible for many of the observed symptoms. Most
of these patients share psychological symptoms including sleep disturbances,
loss of libido, and loss of appetite as well as physical problems such as an
increased risk for accumulating abdominal fat and hardening of the arteries
and other forms of cardiovascular disease. These patients may also experience
suppression of thyroid hormones, and of the immune system. Because they are
at higher risk for these health problems, such patients are likely to have their
life spans shortened by 15 to 20 years if they remain untreated.
Although many disorders result from an overactive stress system, some result
from an under active stress system. For example, in the case of Addison’s
disease, lack of cortisol causes an increase of pigment in the skin, making
the patient appear to have a tan. Other symptoms include fatigue, loss of appetite,
weight loss, weakness, loss of body hair, nausea, vomiting, and an intense craving
for salt. Lack of the hormone CRH also results in the feelings of extreme tiredness
common to people suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome. Lack of CRH is also
central to seasonal affective disorder (SAD), the feelings of fatigue and depression
that plague some patients during winter months.
Chrousos and his team, showed that sudden cessation of CRH production may also
result in the depressive symptoms of postpartum depression. In response to CRH
produced by the placenta, the mother’s system stops manufacturing its
own CRH. When the baby is born, the sudden loss of CRH may result in feelings
of sadness or even severe depression for some women.
Recently, Dr. Chrousos and his coworkers uncovered evidence that frequent insomnia
is more than just having difficulty falling asleep. The researchers found that,
when compared to a group of people who did not have difficulty falling asleep,
the insomniacs had higher ACTH and cortisol levels, both in the evening and
in the first half of the night. Moreover, the insomniacs with the highest cortisol
levels tended to have the greatest difficulty falling asleep.
The researchers theorized that, in many cases,
persistent insomnia may be a disorder of the stress system. From their ACTH
and cortisol levels, it appears that the insomniacs have nervous systems that
are on overdrive, alert and ready to deal with a threat, when they should otherwise
be quieting down. Rather than prescribing
drugs known as hypnotics to regulate the sleep system, the researchers suggested
that physicians might have more success prescribing antidepressants, to help
calm an overactive stress system. Behavior therapy, to help insomniacs relax
in the evening, might also be useful.
After conducting many years of research into the functioning of the HPA axis,
Dr. Chrousos concluded that chronic stress should not be taken lightly or accepted
as a fact of life.
“Persistent, unremitting stress leads to a variety of serious health problems,”
Dr. Chrousos said. “Anyone who suffers from chronic stress needs to take
steps to alleviate it, either by learning simple techniques to relax and calm
down, or with the help of qualified therapists.