MONDAY, April 2 (HealthDay News) -- A new study involving the
common cold may help explain why stress, which dampens the immune
system, seems to trigger inflammation in many people.
That would appear contradictory, because the immune system
creates inflammation (for example, the redness around a wound) to
help the body heal. But the research suggests that high and
long-term levels of stress contribute to inflammation.
In turn, the inflammation can lead to conditions such as heart
disease, asthma and autoimmune disorders, in which the immune
system turns against the body.
The research "suggests the kind of diseases that are going to be
affected by stress," said study lead author Sheldon Cohen,
professor of psychology at Carnegie Mellon University in
Pittsburgh. "They're diseases in which inflammation is a key
aspect."
Over the past five to six decades, researchers have linked
stress to disease, Cohen said. "There's not much question that
stressed people are at greater risk for developing some of these
diseases or having them become more severe. A little bit less clear
is exactly how that happens. How does stress get under the skin to
affect disease outcomes?"
One possibility is that stressed people are simply unhealthier
-- smoking and drinking more and sleeping less. In that area, the
challenge is figuring out which came first, stress or unhealthy
decisions.
The other possibility is that the body's hormones that respond
to stress play a role.
In the new study, investigators performed two experiments,
involving more than 300 people, to gain more insight. The
researchers asked the participants about the stresses in their
lives and then exposed them to cold viruses to see if they got
sick.
After adjusting the statistics for various factors, the
researchers found that people whose bodies had higher levels of
ongoing psychological stress -- such as that caused by divorce --
were less able to dampen inflammation. This seemed to have
something to do with their immune cells being less sensitive to a
hormone that turns off inflammation.
The people with more stress were also at higher risk of
developing a cold, according to the report published online April 2
in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Dr. Andrew Miller, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral
sciences at Emory University School of Medicine who studies how
stress affects the immune system, said the research "provides a
very concrete example of how chronic stress and its effects on the
immune system can affect our daily lives in a very real-world
context."
However, this is just part of a wider picture of how stress
affects the body, Miller cautioned.
"In ancestral times, a stressful environment would have a high likelihood of involving some form of fighting and being wounded and thereby infected," he said. "Inflammation is a process in the body that is essential to fighting infections and healing wounds. Therefore, the induction of inflammation by stress is a way for the body to prepare itself for battle in an environment that represents danger of attack."
While the study uncovered an association between chronic
psychological stress and inflammation, it did not prove a
cause-and-effect relationship.
More information
For more about
stress, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.