Stress slecht voor immuunsysteem.*
Chronische stress zorgt ervoor dat bepaalde proteíne waarde
in het immuunsysteem verhoogd worden hetgeen leidt tot afwijkingen zoals
hartziektes, diabetes, osteoporose, algehele zwakte en verschillende vormen van
kanker.
Research has indicated that
chronic stress can take a hefty toll on a person's health, and a new study
offers one potential reason why.
Investigators found that older
people under chronic stress had higher-than-normal elevations of interleukin-6
(IL-6), an immune-system protein in the blood that promotes inflammation. IL-6
has been linked with various age-related conditions such as heart disease,
diabetes, osteoporosis, frailty and certain cancers.
"This is how chronic
stress can really affect health," said study author Dr. Janice K.
Kiecolt-Glaser, a professor of psychiatry at Ohio State University in Columbus.
"The take-home advice
from this study is that it's really important to try to deal with stress,"
she told. "The older you are, the more it really matters."
Over the course of the
six-year study, IL-6 levels increased an average of four times faster among men
and women who were caring for spouses with dementia than among people who were
not caring for ill spouses. The study participants ranged in age from 55 to 89
at the beginning of the study, with an average age of 71.
The 119 caregivers reported
spending about 10 hours a day on average caring for a spouse when the study
began, Kiecolt-Glaser and colleagues note in the online early edition of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Tests conducted periodically
throughout the study period showed that the caregivers experienced consistently
higher levels of stress and loneliness than the 106 non-caregivers.
In the cases where spouses
died during the study, caregivers continued to have high IL-6 levels, even
several years later.
All of the study participants
were healthy at the outset of the study, and the caregiving and non-caregiving
groups had similar levels of chronic health problems during the follow-up
period.
However, it's likely that the
caregivers would go on to develop a greater number of illnesses due to their
higher IL-6 levels, Kiecolt-Glaser said.
"These data provide
important evidence of a key mechanism through which chronic stressors may have
potent health consequences for older adults, accelerating risk of a host of
age-related diseases," the researchers conclude in their paper.
SOURCE: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2003/doi/10.1073/pnas.1531903100.