Not sure what to do? what to take?
Write to DoctorCinque@hotmail.com
and I will try to help you. It's free.
 
Free Weekly Newsletter Post a Question on this Site  
Home About
Dr. Cinque
Daily Program Lifestyle Tips Why VRP? Order Products View Cart
Checkout
Account Information Security

Search Search for Products
by keyword

List Products I've
Ordered Before



Product Categories
Amino Acids
Antidepressants
Antioxidants
Arthritis
Bone and Joint
Bioenergizers
Blood Sugar
Brain
Cardiovascular
Digestive Aids
Fatty Acids
Hair, Nails and Skin
Herbs
HGH Releasers
Hormones
Immune System
Infection
Liver
Men's Health
Minerals
Multinutrients
Phytonutrients
Sexual Health
Single Vitamins
Sleep Aids
Sports Nutrition
Test Kits
Vision
Weight
Women's Health
Xylitol


Search Articles
by keyword

Search Questions/Answers
by keyword

Resources
Dr. Cinque's
Health Newsletter
Enter email address to subscribe.

Read Newsletter

View Archives
Feedback

Questions-Answers

Post a Question

E-mail Dr. Cinque

· · Chronic Stress Makes Cells Age Faster

Chronic stress takes a toll on the body, triggering premature aging of immune system cells, new research suggests.

"People who are stressed over long periods tend to look haggard, and it is commonly thought that psychological stress leads to premature aging and other diseases of aging," writes lead researcher Elissa S. Epel, PhD, a professor of psychiatry at the University of California at San Francisco.

But exactly how chronic stress "gets under the skin" to do its damage has not been understood, Epel writes. Chronic stress, the focus of numerous studies, has been linked with poor health, heart disease, and lower immunity.

Epel's study appears in the latest issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In it, Epel and colleagues examine one sign of biological aging -- tiny segments of DNA and protein, called telomeres, that cap the ends of chromosomes. Each time a cell divides, a portion of this DNA erodes. After many cell divisions, so much DNA is missing - and the telomeres are so short -- that the aged cell stops dividing.

As cells age, they produce less and less telomerase, an enzyme that adds DNA onto the telomeres. Both telomere length and telomerase levels can therefore indicate a cell's "age," she writes. That's when the risk of disease increases. "The results were striking," says co-author Elizabeth Blackburn, PhD, professor of biology and physiology at UCSF, in a news release. "This is the first evidence that chronic stress - and how a person perceives stress - may damp down telomerase and have a significant impact on the length of telomeres, causing cellular aging."

To look more closely at whether chronic stress leads to telomere shortening, Epel and her colleagues focused on 58 healthy women, all either mothers of a healthy child or "caregiving mothers" of a chronically ill child. The mothers completed a brief questionnaire about chronic stress in their lives over the past month. Then a blood sample from each was analyzed to determine telomere length and telomerase activity. As expected, surveys showed that caregiving mothers had higher stress levels than mothers of healthy children.

Total years spent tending a sick child made a big difference. More caregiving years translated into shorter telomeres and lower telomerase activity. But there was another key finding in the study: A mother's telomere length was related to her perceived stress level -- whether her child was chronically ill or not.

In translating telomere length into years of aging, researchers determined the cells from the highly stressed mothers had aged from 9 to 17 additional years compared with the cells from the low-stress mothers.

"The exact mechanisms that connect the mind to the cell are unknown," writes Epel. "While psychological stress seems to cause telomere shortening and cell aging, it's possible that some people are less vulnerable to chronic stress - and therefore have longer telomeres."

Dr. Cinque's comments: So, how does psychological stress cause a physical change such as the shortening of a telomere? Well, if Dr. Epel can't explain the exact mechanism, then I'm sure I can't either. But one possibility is that it is related to cortisol, the stress hormone. But regardless, there is no doubt that stress takes its toll. Notice how rapidly American presidents age while in office. President Bush is just finishing his first term, and I think he looks a great deal older than he did four years ago, and that's despite having kept up regular and vigorous exercise. I think there are two aspects to dealing with stress. One is to arrange our lives in such a way as to reduce the daily stress level. But since no one can completely avoid stress, the second is to learn techniques to cope with stress more effectively so as to minimize its destructive effect upon our health.

E-mail to a friend

Previous Article      Next Article