The cumulative science linking stress to negative health outcomes is vast. Stress can affect health directly, through autonomic and neuroendocrine responses, but also indirectly, through changes in health behaviors. In this review, we present a brief overview of (a) why we should be interested in stress in the context of health; (b) the stress response and allostatic load; (c) some of the key biological mechanisms through which stress impacts health, such as by influencing hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis regulation and cortisol dynamics, the autonomic nervous system, and gene expression; and (d) evidence of the clinical relevance of stress, exemplified through the risk of infectious diseases. The studies reviewed in this article confirm...
Stress is prevalent among many individuals in today’s society. A literature review was conducted to ...
Early life stress (ELS) is associated with altered stress reactivity and an increased risk for the d...
A robust epidemiological literature suggests an association between chronic stress and the developme...
This chapter provides a general overview and introduces concepts related to major biological pathway...
There are few experiences as engulfing as the subjective experience of stress. It affects multiple b...
Stress is a term used in everyday life to describe everything from feelings of anxiety and grief, to...
Abstract | All organisms must maintain a complex dynamic equilibrium, or homeostasis, which is const...
The human stress response has evolved to maintain homeostasis under conditions of real or perceived ...
Physical and psychological events can produce stress response in various degrees. Stress affects man...
Experience of early life stress (ELS) and trauma is highly prevalent in the general population and h...
The cardiovascular system is subject to various dynamical processes enabling adaptive changes under ...
While stress is a common experience, high levels of stress can be dangerous to both physical and men...
abstract: The following paper explores the various effects of stress on the endocrine system. Many u...
The experience of "stress", in its broadest meaning, is an inevitable part of life. All living creat...
Cardiovascular and immune system pathophysiological changes and diseases may be attributed to stres...
Stress is prevalent among many individuals in today’s society. A literature review was conducted to ...
Early life stress (ELS) is associated with altered stress reactivity and an increased risk for the d...
A robust epidemiological literature suggests an association between chronic stress and the developme...
This chapter provides a general overview and introduces concepts related to major biological pathway...
There are few experiences as engulfing as the subjective experience of stress. It affects multiple b...
Stress is a term used in everyday life to describe everything from feelings of anxiety and grief, to...
Abstract | All organisms must maintain a complex dynamic equilibrium, or homeostasis, which is const...
The human stress response has evolved to maintain homeostasis under conditions of real or perceived ...
Physical and psychological events can produce stress response in various degrees. Stress affects man...
Experience of early life stress (ELS) and trauma is highly prevalent in the general population and h...
The cardiovascular system is subject to various dynamical processes enabling adaptive changes under ...
While stress is a common experience, high levels of stress can be dangerous to both physical and men...
abstract: The following paper explores the various effects of stress on the endocrine system. Many u...
The experience of "stress", in its broadest meaning, is an inevitable part of life. All living creat...
Cardiovascular and immune system pathophysiological changes and diseases may be attributed to stres...
Stress is prevalent among many individuals in today’s society. A literature review was conducted to ...
Early life stress (ELS) is associated with altered stress reactivity and an increased risk for the d...
A robust epidemiological literature suggests an association between chronic stress and the developme...