Literature DB >> 2853404

The relationship between repressive and defensive coping styles and monocyte, eosinophile, and serum glucose levels: support for the opioid peptide hypothesis of repression.

L D Jamner1, G E Schwartz, H Leigh.   

Abstract

The opioid peptide hypothesis of repression (1) predicts that repressive coping is associated with increased functional endorphin levels in the brain, which can result in decreased immunocompetence and hyperglycemia. In a random sample of 312 patients seen at a Yale Medical School outpatient clinic, significant main effects of coping style were found for monocyte and eosinophile counts, serum glucose levels, and self-reports of medication allergies. Specifically, repressive and defensive high-anxious patients demonstrated significantly decreased monocyte counts. In addition, repressive coping was associated with elevated eosinophile counts, serum glucose levels, and self-reported reactions to medications. This behavioral, immunologic, and endocrine profile is consistent with the opioid peptide hypothesis, which provides an integrative framework for relating the attenuated emotional experience of pain and distress characteristic of repressive coping with reduced resistance to infectious and neoplastic disease.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 2853404     DOI: 10.1097/00006842-198811000-00002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychosom Med        ISSN: 0033-3174            Impact factor:   4.312


  10 in total

1.  Psychoneuroimmunology examined: The role of subjective stress.

Authors:  Lisa M Thornton; Barbara L Andersen
Journal:  Cellscience       Date:  2006-04-30

2.  Psychological coping with acute pain: an examination of the role of endogenous opioid mechanisms.

Authors:  S Bruehl; C R Carlson; J F Wilson; J A Norton; G Colclough; M J Brady; J J Sherman; J A McCubbin
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1996-04

3.  Suppressed hostility predicted hypertension incidence among middle-aged men: the normative aging study.

Authors:  Jianping Zhang; Raymond Niaura; John F Todaro; Jeanne M McCaffery; Biing-Jiun Shen; Avron Spiro; Kenneth D Ward
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2005-09-23

4.  Trauma and personality correlates in long-term pediatric cancer survivors.

Authors:  S J Erickson; H Steiner
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2001

5.  Defensiveness and perception of external inspiratory resistive loads in asthma.

Authors:  S Isenberg; P Lehrer; S Hochron
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1997-10

6.  Adaptive style and physiological reactivity during a laboratory stress paradigm in children with cancer and healthy controls.

Authors:  Natalie A Williams; Michael T Allen; Sean Phipps
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2011-02-09

7.  Biobehavioral research on coronary heart disease: where is the person?

Authors:  J Denollet
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1993-04

8.  Which symptoms matter? Self-report and observer discrepancies in repressors and high-anxious women with metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  Janine Giese-Davis; Rie Tamagawa; Maya Yutsis; Suzanne Twirbutt; Karen Piemme; Eric Neri; C Barr Taylor; David Spiegel
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2012-10-20

9.  Pain sensitivity in offspring of hypertensives at rest and during baroreflex stimulation.

Authors:  C France; B Ditto; P Adler
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1991-10

10.  Associations between repression, general maladjustment, body weight, and body shape in older males: the Normative Aging Study.

Authors:  Raymond S Niaura; Laura R Stroud; John Todaro; Kenneth D Ward; Avron Spiro; Carolyn Aldwin; Lewis Landsberg; Scott T Weiss
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  2003
  10 in total

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