Related article: Psychosomatic explanations for disease, Anxiety
Related article: Psychosomatic explanations for disease, Anxiety
Not unlike vitamin D metabolism, the human stress response is governed by a sophisticated hormonal system, one which is also dysregulated in patients with chronic inflammatory diseases. Successful management of both stressors and a patient's stress response can temper disease symptoms while the Marshall Protocol (MP) is facilitating recovery from disease. These diseases cannot be cured or resolved through lifestyle modifications including “stress management” any more than HIV, tuberculosis, polio, or any of the other forms of infectious disease can.
Physical stress or trauma has also been accepted as a partial contributor for several chronic diseases. However, psychological or physical stress does not appear to play any greater role than many factors which drive disease. There appears a difference between stress causing disease and stress being one of many factors which can influence the progression of disease. Other factors such as the presence of microbial pathogens appear to play a more prominent role.
Researchers have shown that stress has certain detrimental effects on immune function, including reduced natural kill cell activity, lymphocyte populations, lymphocyte proliferation, antibody production and reactivation of latent viral infections.1) Such effects on the immune system have some effect on health which include, but are not limited to, delayed wound healing, impaired responses to vaccination and development and progression of cancer.2)
Some researchers have concluded that stressors may trigger disease in susceptible individuals. These researchers point to retrospective studies, which have found that a high proportion of certain kinds of patients reported uncommon emotional stress before disease onset.3) Indeed, a relationship between stress and disease has been identified in at least the following diseases:
On the other hand, there is good reason to believe that people with higher bacterial loads are more likely to respond to stressors with an elevated stress response. In this respect, stress may merely accelerate the inevitable onset of clinically observable disease.
Patients in the later stages of the MP have reported increased resilience, an observation which suggests that bacterial pathogens drive the stress response.
Some bacterial pathogens directly respond to stress-induced neuroendocrine hormones, reacting to stress in parallel to host immune cells. For example, when catecholaminergic nerves within the gut release norepinephrine, the local population of gram-negative bacteria, mainly Escherichia coli, increases by as much as 105-fold.9) Stress hormones not only enhance growth, but also modulate expression of virulence-associated genes in some bacterial pathogens. As a result, stress-mediated changes may shift the microbial colonization patterns on the mucosal surface and alter the susceptibility of the host to infection.10)
According to Sandrini et al., stress hormones form complexes with iron-sequestering proteins such as transferrin and lactoferrin, reducing their affinity for iron and thus allowing bacteria to obtain iron from these ordinarily inaccessible host stores.11)
A second mechanism is independent of host iron and, instead, involves synthesis of a novel growth stimulator among many different species of bacteria. This autoinducer restores active growth for several pathogens, including E. coli O157:H7 and Salmonella enterica, and it also induces Bacillus anthracis spores to germinate. Several investigators have attempted to understand the global response of bacteria to stress hormones by looking at gene expression profiles. Interpreting these microarray analyses of enteric bacteria such as E. coli and Salmonella becomes complicated in part because of the diversity of media on which these bacteria are grown and of the varied physiological states of the cultures being profiled.12)
Epinephrine, a hormone produced in response to stress, is produced by at least one bacteria, E. coli, for communication with other members of the species (quorum sensing).13) A pathogen which uses the same signaling molecule the body uses for stress makes sense: E. coli would be able to spread more effectively during times when the body is weakened. The shared use of the epinephrine molecule may also explain, at least in part, by why those with chronic diseases (who carry high pathogenic loads) are sensitive to stress.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA14 offers another example of how stress hormones can aid microbes.14)
However, the stress response by the host does not appear to be detrimental in all respects. In Salmonella bacteria, epinephrine has been found to reduce Salmonella's defense systems against antimicrobial peptidesBody’s naturally produced broad-spectrum antibacterials which target pathogens..15)
In susceptible individuals, physical stress or trauma has been accepted as a trigger for chronic disease for at least the following diseases:
Motor vehicle collision trauma appears capable of triggering FM, but generally not through direct biomechanical injury. Instead, the evidence suggests that MVC trauma can act as a “stressor”… The evidence that motor vehicle collision trauma may trigger fibromyalgia meets established criteria for determining causality.
Samuel A. McLean, et al. 19)
Microbes in combination with physical stress have been shown to induce memory dysfunction in mice. Mice were infected with the non-invasive intestinal pathogen, Citrobacter rodentium in the presence or absence of acute stress. No behavioural abnormalities were observed, either at the height of infection or following bacterial clearance. After infection clearance, however, when one group of infected mice were exposed to acute stress, however, memory dysfunction was apparent.20)
War offers a number of circumstances which contribute to the incidence and prevalence of chronic disease as evidenced by epidemiological studies.
There are a number of circumstances inherent to war which appear to drive the prevalence of chronic disease.
Epidemiological evidence that war predisposes combatants, their families, and other noncombatants to increased rates of certain chronic diseases. These conditions include:
Perhaps it is more than coincidence that those diseases for which there is a demonstrated association with war – cancers, hypertension, obesity, and many of the other forms of cardiovascular disease – saw an increase in the aftermath of World War II, particularly in the United States. Given the discrepancy with which the genders have traditionally enlisted, it would be speculative to suggest that war plays a role in the onset of predominantly “male” chronic diseases, but that possibility may be worth further study.
Mast cell activation plays an important role in stress-mediated disease pathogenesis. 34)