Literature DB >> 10588756

Repeated, but not acute, stress suppresses inflammatory plasma extravasation.

H J Strausbaugh1, M F Dallman, J D Levine.   

Abstract

Clinical findings suggest that inflammatory disease symptoms are aggravated by ongoing, repeated stress, but not by acute stress. We hypothesized that, compared with single acute stressors, chronic repeated stress may engage different physiological mechanisms that exert qualitatively different effects on the inflammatory response. Because inhibition of plasma extravasation, a critical component of the inflammatory response, has been associated with increased disease severity in experimental arthritis, we tested for a potential repeated stress-induced inhibition of plasma extravasation. Repeated, but not single, exposures to restraint stress produced a profound inhibition of bradykinin-induced synovial plasma extravasation in the rat. Experiments examining the mechanism of inhibition showed that the effect of repeated stress was blocked by adrenalectomy, but not by adrenal medullae denervation, suggesting that the adrenal cortex mediates this effect. Consistent with known effects of stress and with mediation by the adrenal cortex, restraint stress evoked repeated transient elevations of plasma corticosterone levels. This elevated corticosterone was necessary and sufficient to produce inhibition of plasma extravasation because the stress-induced inhibition was blocked by preventing corticosterone synthesis and, conversely, induction of repeated transient elevations in plasma corticosterone levels mimicked the effects of repeated stress. These data suggest that repetition of a mild stressor can induce changes in the physiological state of the animal that enable a previously innocuous stressor to inhibit the inflammatory response. These findings provide a potential explanation for the clinical association between repeated stress and aggravation of inflammatory disease symptoms and provide a model for study of the biological mechanisms underlying the stress-induced aggravation of chronic inflammatory diseases.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10588756      PMCID: PMC24487          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.25.14629

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  36 in total

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  16 in total

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Journal:  Mol Cell Biochem       Date:  2011-09-27       Impact factor: 3.396

Review 4.  Interoceptive modulation of neuroendocrine, emotional, and hypophagic responses to stress.

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6.  Exogenous daytime melatonin modulates response of adolescent mice in a repeated unpredictable stress paradigm.

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7.  Stress-induced alterations in mast cell numbers and proteinase-activated receptor-2 expression of the colon: role of corticotrophin-releasing factor.

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8.  Beta 2-adrenergic receptor regulation of human neutrophil function is sexually dimorphic.

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Review 9.  Stress-induced alterations in estradiol sensitivity increase risk for obesity in women.

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10.  The effect of milk fermented by yogurt cultures plus Lactobacillus casei DN-114001 on the immune response of subjects under academic examination stress.

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