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Release Date: August 2, 1999
Contact: Madelon L. Peters, PhD
31-43-3881603
madelon.peters@dep.unimaas.nl
or
Guido Godaert
31-30-2532300.
g.godaert@fss.uu.nl
Immune System Responds Greater to Uncontrollable Stresses
The body's immune response is affected in distinctly different ways by the two
widely-recognized determinants of the stress response: the controllability or
uncontrollability of the stressor, and the mental effort or demand required to cope with
the stress, new research shows.
"An uncontrollable stressor that lasts 15 minutes can have consequences for health
because it may interfere with cytokine interleukin-6 function, which plays an essential
role in activating the immune defense," said Madelon L. Peters, PhD, head of the
Dutch study.
Uncontrollable stressors also produce high levels of cortisol, which suppresses immune
system functioning and may have a prolonged detrimental effect for health, the researchers
reported.
On the other hand, the scientists found that the mental efforts required to cope with
high-level stressors produce only brief immune changes that appear to have little
consequence for health.
The researchers' findings emerged from a study that involved taking repeated blood
and saliva samples, blood pressure readings and electrocardiograms from 96 male students
aged 18 to 28 while they performed high-effort or low-effort mathematical and other tasks
under continuous noise.
Half of the students could control the intensity of the noise coming through their
earphones, the others could not. Some of the tasks in the uncontrollable condition were
rigged to guarantee failure.
The research was conducted at the University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands. The
results of the study appear in the current issue of Psychosomatic Medicine.
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Psychosomatic Medicine is the official peer-reviewed journal of
the American Psychosomatic Society, published bimonthly. For information about the
journal, contact Joel E. Dimsdale, MD, at (619) 543-5468.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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