|Articles|January 1, 2003

Pharmacy Times

  • Volume 0
  • 0

Stress Lowers Immune System Functioning

In addition to making people more susceptible to illnesses, chronic stress can impair the immune system?s ability to respond to its own anti-inflammatory signals, researchers reported in Health Psychology (November 2002).

The researchers examined 25 healthy parents with children undergoing treatment for cancer and 25 healthy parents with healthy children. Salivary cortisol and blood samples were taken from the parents.

As expected, the parents of children with cancer reported more psychological distress than the parents of healthy children. The parents of children with cancer also were more likely to have diminished sensitivity to glucocorticoid, a hormone that is responsible for turning off the inflammatory response following infection and/or injury. Additionally, the findings showed that social support lessens the impact of stress on the immune system.

Articles in this issue

almost 23 years ago

Preparing for E-Prescribing

almost 23 years ago

Ankylosing Spondylitis

almost 23 years ago

Alarming Numbers

almost 23 years ago

"Magic Bracelet"

almost 23 years ago

It May Not Be Carpal Tunnel

Newsletter

Stay informed on drug updates, treatment guidelines, and pharmacy practice trends—subscribe to Pharmacy Times for weekly clinical insights.


Latest CME