Literature DB >> 14572690

Stress/strain/life revisited. Quantification by blood pressure chronomics: benetensive, transtensive or maletensive chrono-vasculo-neuro-immuno-modulation.

Franz Halberg1, Germaine Cornélissen, Novera H Spector, Robert P Sonkowsky, Kuniaki Otsuka, Ion Baciu, Monica Hriscu, Othild Schwartzkopff, Earl E Bakken.   

Abstract

We propose to initiate the automatic self-assessment of wear and tear as "stress and strain" by the time structures of blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR), in order to arrive eventually at an individualized timely and timed routine of life and to early preventive intervention as soon as needed. The routine may involve physiological scheduling of physical and mental activities and meals, and if need be of non-drug or drug treatment for stress amplification, e.g., by exercise, and/or strain (not stress) relief by relaxation. In so doing, we recognize the circulation as a pillar and marker of preventive and active neuroimmunomodulation (NIM), suggesting that some concerns of a vasculo- and broader NIM can be quantified by transdisciplinary chronobiology using its cartography--chronomics--of time structures, i.e., chronomes, from chronos = time and nomos = rule. Thus, we are introducing the chronomics of BP, HR and of other variables in the historical context of pioneers who were indispensable to experimental medicine. We build upon their contributions, but we must point out when, in the past, by necessity rather than choice, the giants provided rationalizing truisms that are no substitute for systematic serial data collection and appropriate computer analysis. A time-unspecified spotcheck as a baseline is much better than no measurement, but very often it is not enough, and it is always insufficient when an estimate of variability constitutes the information needed. For dynamic cycles, there are only reference cycles as a routine, although when maps are available, single timed spotchecks can be invaluable. With reference to their historical context, here we rely only upon data which necessity, rather than philosophy, compels us to collect.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14572690     DOI: 10.1016/j.biopha.2003.08.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother        ISSN: 0753-3322            Impact factor:   6.529


  5 in total

1.  Transdisciplinary unifying implications of circadian findings in the 1950s.

Authors:  Franz Halberg; Germaine Cornélissen; George Katinas; Elena V Syutkina; Robert B Sothern; Rina Zaslavskaya; Francine Halberg; Yoshihiko Watanabe; Othild Schwartzkopff; Kuniaki Otsuka; Roberto Tarquini; Perfetto Frederico; Jarmila Siggelova
Journal:  J Circadian Rhythms       Date:  2003-10-29

2.  Home C-ABPM for Preventive and Curative Health Care and Transdisciplinary Science.

Authors:  Franz Halberg; Germaine Cornélissen; Kuniaki Otsuka; Yoshihiko Watanabe; Ram B Singh; Miguel Revilla; Salvador Sanchez de la Peña; Clicerio Gonzalez; Jarmila Siegelova; Pavel Homolka; Jiri Dusek; Michal Zeman; Rk Singh; Dana Johnson; Bohumil Fiser
Journal:  World Heart J       Date:  2008

Review 3.  Cancer chronomics III. Chronomics for cancer, aging, melatonin and experimental therapeutics researchers.

Authors:  Franz Halberg; Germaine Cornélissen; Waldemar Ulmer; Mikhail Blank; William Hrushesky; Patricia Wood; Rajesh K Singh; Zhengrong Wang
Journal:  J Exp Ther Oncol       Date:  2006

4.  Stress, geomagnetic disturbance, infradian and circadian sampling for circulating corticosterone and models of human depression?

Authors:  A Olah; R Jozsa; V Csernus; J Sandor; A Muller; M Zeman; W Hoogerwerf; G Cornélissen; F Halberg
Journal:  Neurotox Res       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 3.911

5.  Chronobiologically Interpreted Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Health and Disease.

Authors:  Franz Halberg; Hc Mult; Germaine Cornélissen; Dewayne Hillman; Larry A Beaty; Shiyu Hong; Othild Schwartzkopff; Yoshihiko Watanabe; Kuniaki Otsuka; Jarmila Siegelova
Journal:  Glob Adv Health Med       Date:  2012-05
  5 in total

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