journal
Journals Stress : the International Jou...

Stress : the International Journal on the Biology of Stress

https://read.qxmd.com/read/38752853/how-spatial-omics-approaches-can-be-used-to-map-the-biological-impacts-of-stress-in-psychiatric-disorders-a-perspective-overview-and-technical-guide
#21
REVIEW
Amber R Curry, Lezanne Ooi, Natalie Matosin
Exposure to significant levels of stress and trauma throughout life is a leading risk factor for the development of major psychiatric disorders. Despite this, we do not have a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms that explain how stress raises psychiatric disorder risk. Stress in humans is complex and produces variable molecular outcomes depending on the stress type, timing, and duration. Deciphering how stress increases disorder risk has consequently been challenging to address with the traditional single-target experimental approaches primarily utilized to date...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38711299/the-stress-phenotyping-framework-a-multidisciplinary-biobehavioral-approach-for-assessing-and-therapeutically-targeting-maladaptive-stress-physiology
#22
REVIEW
Rachel Gilgoff, Summer Mengelkoch, Jorina Elbers, Krista Kotz, Arielle Radin, Isha Pasumarthi, Reanna Murthy, Sayantani Sindher, Nadine Burke Harris, George M Slavich
Although dysregulated stress biology is becoming increasingly recognized as a key driver of lifelong disparities in chronic disease, we presently have no validated biomarkers of toxic stress physiology; no biological, behavioral, or cognitive treatments specifically focused on normalizing toxic stress processes; and no agreed-upon guidelines for treating stress in the clinic or evaluating the efficacy of interventions that seek to reduce toxic stress and improve human functioning. We address these critical issues by (a) systematically describing key systems and mechanisms that are dysregulated by stress; (b) summarizing indicators, biomarkers, and instruments for assessing stress response systems; and (c) highlighting therapeutic approaches that can be used to normalize stress-related biopsychosocial functioning...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38676353/differential-impact-of-prenatal-ptsd-symptoms-and-preconception-trauma-exposure-on-placental-nr3c1-and-fkbp5-methylation
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura R Stroud, Nancy C Jao, L G Ward, Sharon Y Lee, Carmen J Marsit
Perinatal stress is associated with altered placental methylation, which plays a critical role in fetal development and infant outcomes. This proof-of-concept pilot study investigated the impact of lifetime trauma exposure and perinatal PTSD symptoms on epigenetic regulation of placenta glucocorticoid signaling genes ( NR3C1 and FKBP5). Lifetime trauma exposure and PTSD symptoms during pregnancy were assessed in a racially/ethnically diverse sample of pregnant women ( N  = 198). Participants were categorized into three groups: (1) No Trauma (-T); (2) Trauma, No Symptoms (T - S); and (3) Trauma and Symptoms (T + S)...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38644755/a-mismatch-between-early-and-recent-life-stress-predicts-better-response-inhibition-but-not-cognitive-inhibition
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Grant S Shields, Colton L Hunter
A growing body of work has found that a mismatch between early and recent life stress, more than a cumulative influence of stress, contributes to detrimental stress-related health outcomes. To date, however, no work has examined how such a mismatch might relate to stress-related cognitive outcomes. We addressed this gap in the current study by assessing participants' ( N  = 154, M age = 18.7, 104 female) early and recent life stress using the same inventory, and subsequently assessing their inhibitory control in a hybrid stop-signal/flanker task...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38628154/early-age-thermal-manipulation-and-supplemental-antioxidants-on-physiological-biochemical-and-productive-performance-of-broiler-chickens-in-hot-tropical-environments
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aderanti Ifeoluwa Oni, John Adesanya Abiona, Adeboye Olusesan Fafiolu, Oyegunle Emmanuel Oke
Heat stress has been ranked as a critical environmental issue confronting chicken farmers worldwide because of its detrimental effect on the growth, performance and health of the birds. This study evaluated the effects of early-age thermal manipulation (EATC) and supplemental antioxidants on the physiological responses of broilers in a hot tropical environment. A total of 300 day-old Ross broiler chicks were allocated to five thermal and dietary treatments, having 5 replicates of twelve birds each. The treatments were: chicks reared using the conventional method (CC), chicks exposed to early thermal manipulation with a temperature of 38 °C at day 5 with no antioxidant supplementation (TC), TC plus vitamin E at 250 mg/kg of feed (TV), TC plus selenium at 0...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38563163/developmental-and-adult-stress-effects-of-steroids-and-neurosteroids
#26
REVIEW
Isha R Gore, Elizabeth Gould
In humans, exposure to early life adversity has profound implications for susceptibility to developing neuropsychiatric disorders later in life. Studies in rodents have shown that stress experienced during early postnatal life can have lasting effects on brain development. Glucocorticoids and sex steroids are produced in endocrine glands and the brain from cholesterol; these molecules bind to nuclear and membrane-associated steroid receptors. Unlike other steroids that can also be made in the brain, neurosteroids bind specifically to neurotransmitter receptors, not steroid receptors...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557197/chronic-adolescent-stress-alters-gr-fkbp5-interactions-in-the-hippocampus-of-adult-female-rats
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sydney Rowson, Mandakh Bekhbat, Sean Kelly, Molly M Hyer, Samya Dyer, David Weinshenker, Gretchen Neigh
Chronic stress exposure during development can have lasting behavioral consequences that differ in males and females. More specifically, increased depressive behaviors in females, but not males, are observed in both humans and rodent models of chronic stress. Despite these known stress-induced outcomes, the molecular consequences of chronic adolescent stress in the adult brain are less clear. The stress hormone corticosterone activates the glucocorticoid receptor, and activity of the receptor is regulated through interactions with co-chaperones-such as the immunophilin FK506 binding proteins 5 (FKBP5)...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533574/the-influence-of-acute-stress-exposure-on-cognitive-reappraisal-a-psychophysiological-study
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michèle Wessa, Magdalena Sandner, Jérôme Rimpel, Sandra Schönfelder
Successful and efficient emotion regulation (ER) is a key mechanism for mental health. However, acute stress may impact the ability to cognitively regulate negative emotions due to its immediate effects on executive functioning. Based on previous studies, we expected that the time at which ER is tested after a stressor might have a decisive influence, with impairments in ER being more pronounced immediately after stress as compared to a later post-stress phase. To investigate such a time-dependent effect of stress on ER, we investigated 50 healthy adults (26 female) who were exposed to either the Trier Social Stress Test ( n  = 25) or a control condition ( n  = 25)...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38528793/acute-stress-does-not-modulate-selective-attention-in-a-composite-letter-task
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tobias Rüttgens, Boris Suchan, Oliver T Wolf, Christian J Merz
Acute stress has been demonstrated to affect a diverse array of attentional processes, one of which is selective attention. Selective attention refers to the cognitive process of deliberately allocating attentional resources to a specific stimulus, while ignoring other, distracting stimuli. While catecholamines have been shown to narrow attention, investigations on the influence of the stress hormone cortisol have yielded ambiguous results. We conducted two separate studies utilizing different laboratory stress induction paradigms to examine if cortisol influences the ability to selectively attend to local or global elements of a visual stimulus...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38497496/exposure-to-prenatal-stressors-and-infant-autonomic-nervous-system-regulation-of-stress
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra J Weiss, Bruce Cooper, Cherry Leung
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between fetal exposure to maternal prenatal stressors and infant parasympathetic (PNS) and sympathetic (SNS) nervous function at 3 timepoints across the first year of life. BACKGROUND: Autonomic nervous system impairments may mediate associations between gestational exposure to stressors and later infant health problems. Heart rate variability (HRV) provides a sensitive index of PNS and SNS function...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38425100/multi-omics-in-stress-and-health-research-study-designs-that-will-drive-the-field-forward
#31
REVIEW
Summer Mengelkoch, Jeffrey Gassen, Shahar Lev-Ari, Jenna C Alley, Sophia Miryam Schüssler-Fiorenza Rose, Michael P Snyder, George M Slavich
Despite decades of stress research, there still exist substantial gaps in our understanding of how social, environmental, and biological factors interact and combine with developmental stressor exposures, cognitive appraisals of stressors, and psychosocial coping processes to shape individuals' stress reactivity, health, and disease risk. Relatively new biological profiling approaches, called multi-omics, are helping address these issues by enabling researchers to quantify thousands of molecules from a single blood or tissue sample, thus providing a panoramic snapshot of the molecular processes occurring in an organism from a systems perspective...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38414377/sex-differences-in-body-temperature-and-neural-power-spectra-in-response-to-repeated-restraint-stress
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
I C Ravaglia, V Jasodanand, S Bhatnagar, L A Grafe
Repeated stress is associated with an increased risk of developing psychiatric illnesses such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which is more common in women, yet the neurobiology behind this sex difference is unknown. Habituation to repeated stress is impaired in PTSD, and recent preclinical studies have shown that female rats do not habituate as fully as male rats to repeated stress, which leads to impairments in cognition and sleep. Further research should examine sex differences after repeated stress in other relevant measures, such as body temperature and neural activity...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38377153/prenatal-exposure-to-social-adversity-and-infant-cortisol-in-the-first-year-of-life
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria F Keeton, Thomas J Hoffmann, Kalisha Moneé Goodwin, Bree Powell, Sophia Tupuola, Sandra J Weiss
Exposure to social adversity has been associated with cortisol dysregulation during pregnancy and in later childhood; less is known about how prenatal exposure to social stressors affects postnatal cortisol of infants. In a secondary analysis of data from a longitudinal study, we tested whether a pregnant woman's reports of social adversity during the third trimester were associated with their infant's resting cortisol at 1, 6, and 12 months postnatal. Our hypothesis was that prenatal exposure to social adversity would be associated with elevation of infants' cortisol...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38377152/chronic-restraint-stress-induces-abnormal-behaviors-in-pain-sensitivity-and-cognitive-function-in-mice-the-role-of-keap1-nrf2-pathway
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ning Yang, Yue Wang, Xiaoxiao Luo, Gaofeng Zhan
Stress is a series of physical and psychological responses to external and internal environmental stimuli. Growing studies have demonstrated the detrimental impacts of acute restraint stress (ARS) and chronic restraint stress (CRS) on animal behavior. However, the related pathogenesis and therapeutic mechanisms remain unclear. Hence, the present study aimed to examine whether unfolded protein response (UPR) and Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (Keap1)-nuclear factor erythroid 2 related factor 2 (Nrf2) pathway are associated with ARS- and CRS- induced abnormal behaviors of pain sensitivity and cognitive function...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38377148/salivary-testosterone-and-cortisol-response-in-acute-stress-modulated-by-seven-sessions-of-mindfulness-meditation-in-young-males
#35
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Yaxin Fan, Yifen Cui, Rongxiang Tang, Amar Sarkar, Pranjal Mehta, Yi-Yuan Tang
Stress is an established risk factor for negative health outcomes. Salivary cortisol and testosterone concentrations increase in response to acute psychosocial stress. It's crucial to reduce stress for health and well-being through evidence-based interventions. Body-mind interventions such as meditation and Tai Chi have shown reduced cortisol levels but mixed results in testosterone concentration after stress. To address this research gap, we conducted a pilot randomized controlled trial to examine the modulating effects of a short-term (seven 20-minute sessions) mindfulness meditation on testosterone and cortisol in response to acute stress...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38258508/how-an-appreciation-of-dynamics-has-altered-our-understanding-of-the-hpa-axis
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stafford Lightman, Thomas Upton
Rhythmicity is a intrinsic feature of biological systems, including the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, a mammalian neurohormonal system crucial both in daily life and as a network that responds to stressful stimuli. Circadian and ultradian rhythmicity underlie HPA activity in rodents and in humans, regulating gene expression, metabolism and behavior, and adverse consequences occur when rhythms are disturbed. In the assessment of human disease, the complexity of HPA rhythmicity is rarely acknowledged or understood, and is currently a limitation to better diagnosis and treatment...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38179979/behavior-synaptic-mitochondria-and-microglia-are-differentially-impacted-by-chronic-adolescent-stress-and-repeated-endotoxin-exposure-in-male-and-female-rats
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A J Wegener, M M Hyer, I Targett, A Kloster, G A Shaw, A M M Rodriguez, S K Dyer, G N Neigh
Early life adversity and chronic inflammation have both been associated with cognitive impairment and neural compromise. In this study, we investigated the interactions between a history of chronic adolescent stress (CAS) and repeated endotoxin exposure on behavior, synaptic mitochondria, and microglia in adult male and female Wistar rats. Adult rats from chronic stress and control conditions were exposed to either repeated endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide; LPS) or saline injections every 3 days for 9 weeks...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38140734/accumbal-%C3%AE-opioid-receptors-and-salt-taste-elicited-hedonic-responses-in-a-rodent-model-of-prenatal-adversity-and-their-correlates-using-human-functional-genomics
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Adrianne Rahde Bischoff, Roberta Dalle Molle, Amanda Brondani Mucellini, Irina Pokhvisneva, Robert D Levitan, Michael J Meaney, Patrícia P Silveira
Prenatal adversity is associated with behavioral obesogenic features such as preference for palatable foods. Salt appetite may play a role in the development of adiposity and its consequences in individuals exposed to prenatal adversity, and sodium consumption involves individual differences in accumbal µ-opioid receptors function. We investigated the hedonic responses to salt and the levels of µ-opioid receptors and tyrosine hydroxylase in the nucleus accumbens (Nacc) of pups from an animal model of prenatal dietary restriction...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38131654/decreased-amygdala-sensorimotor-connectivity-mediates-the-association-between-prenatal-stress-and-broad-autism-phenotype-in-young-adults-project-ice-storm
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xinyuan Li, Muhammad Naveed Iqbal Qureshi, David P Laplante, Guillaume Elgbeili, Vincent Paquin, Sherri Lee Jones, Suzanne King, Pedro Rosa-Neto
Studies show that prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) is related to risk for child autism, and to atypical amygdala functional connectivity in the autistic child. Yet, it remains unclear whether amygdala functional connectivity mediates the association between PNMS and autistic traits, particularly in young adult offspring. We recruited women who were pregnant during, or within 3 months of, the 1998 Quebec ice storm crisis, and assessed three aspects of PNMS: objective hardship (events experienced during the ice storm), subjective distress (post-traumatic stress symptoms experienced as a result of the ice storm) and cognitive appraisal...
January 2024: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37964581/stress-in-performance-related-pay-the-effect-of-payment-contracts-and-social-evaluative-threat
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicole Andelic, Julia Allan, Keith A Bender, Daniel Powell, Ioannis Theodossiou
There is some evidence that performance-related pay (PRP) leads to higher levels of stress as it incentivises employees to work harder for longer. However, PRP in the workplace also typically involves performance monitoring, which may introduce an additional source of stress via social-evaluative threat (SET). The current study examined the effect of PRP on stress while varying the level of performance monitoring/SET.Using an incentivised mixed design experiment, 206 participants completed a simulated work task after being randomly allocated to either a PRP contract (£0...
November 15, 2023: Stress: the International Journal on the Biology of Stress
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