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Stress and disease likely linked

Published on October 10, 2007 at 1:03 PM · No Comments

A new commentary in the Oct. 10 edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association explores whether psychological stress leads to disease and concludes that the link is likely.

The authors, who say consistent results across different kinds of studies suggest that stress plays a causal role in disease, looked at four diseases.

“The evidence from studies of depression and heart disease is most convincing. The HIV/AIDS data are a little weaker. The evidence for stress playing a role in cancer isn't all that good, even though there is supporting evidence from studies of animals,” said lead author Sheldon Cohen.

Cohen and colleagues want more time, thought and dollars invested to explore whether interventions designed to reduce stress influence health.

“The existing evidence linking stress to health is impressive,” said Cohen, a psychology professor at Carnegie Mellon University. “What we need now is to find out what actually works to reduce stress,” he added. “After that we'd like to see randomized controlled trials to determine if these stress-reducing strategies translate to less disease.”

The commentators are all psychologists who study the interplay of biology and behavior on the body.

Cohen says it would be unethical to expose someone to ongoing stress that might cause them permanent harm, so gold-standard evidence from randomized experimental studies is not available. Still, there is convincing confirmation from prospective cohort studies, natural experiments, animal studies and brief laboratory tests on humans.

Cohen says the evidence adds up.

In studies of people exposed to brief, acute stress, researchers have documented changes in the way the body functions.

“That approach looks for the effect of stress on body systems related to disease — things like heart rate, blood pressure or changes in immune function — but we don't necessarily know that such changes would lead to disease,” Cohen said.

Researchers have also noted associations between stress and disease in prospective studies. In those investigations, the stress levels of participants are measured; then investigators follow them to see if the participant groups who experienced the most stress are also the people with develop the highest rates of death and disease.

“The problem with that approach is there could be environmental or personality characteristics that influence both why a person is stressed and why they developed a disease,” Cohen said.

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The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News-Medical.Net.



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