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Aktuell tid och datum: tis mar 19 2024, 08:52

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Hur svarar vi fysiologiskt på att bli utfrysta eller utelämnade i sociala sammanhang när vi är deprimerade?



Depression is assumed to be both a risk factor for rejection and a result of it, and as such constitutes an important factor in rejection research.

Attachment theory has been applied to understand psychological disorders, such as depression, and can explain individual differences in responses to rejection.

Research on autonomic nervous system activity to rejection experiences has been contradictory, with opposing strings of argumentation (activating vs. numbing).

We investigated autonomic nervous system-mediated peripheral physiological responses (heart rate) to experimentally manipulated ostracism (Cyberball) in 97 depressed patients with organized (n = 52) and disorganized attachment status (n = 45).

Controlling for baseline mean heart rate levels, depressed patients with disorganized attachment status responded to ostracism with significantly higher increases in heart rate than depressed patients with organized attachment status (p = .029; ηp2 = .051).

These results suggest that attachment status may be a useful indicator of autonomic responses to perceived social threat, which in turn may affect the therapeutic process and the patient-therapist relationship.




http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0150375

#studie #psykologi #beteende #stigma
av Onddruid
i tis mar 08 2016, 10:15
 
Sök i: Nyheter
Ämne: Hur svarar vi fysiologiskt på att bli utfrysta eller utelämnade i sociala sammanhang när vi är deprimerade?
Svar: 1
Visningar: 1637

Motståndskraft mot stress, vad är det och vart kommer det ifrån?

Nature skrev:Confronted with a life-threatening situation, hormones and neurotransmitters prep us for action. Specific stress hormones — cortisol in primates, corticosterone in most rodents — are released, some of which surge across the blood–brain barrier. Stress gets everywhere: all our cells host receptors for the hormone. “Every brain area has something happen to it,” says Kaufer. The human brain has two types of receptor for cortisol. One has a six to tenfold higher affinity for the molecule than the other, and so is activated earlier, by smaller amounts of cortisol.

The hippocampus (which is pivotal for memory) and the amygdala (the centre for emotions) contain lots of the high-affinity receptors, and are, therefore, activated by slight rises in the hormone. The frontal lobe, which is involved in executive planning and control, has only the low-affinity receptor, and is activated later, after the tide has risen. And, as Lupien and colleagues found, both memory formation and recall in adults can be influenced by cortisol1.

The existence of two receptor types means that response to stress is not linear. “The relationship between circulating stress hormone and memory is an inverted U-shape function,” Lupien explains. “Up to a certain level, stress hormones are good for your memory” — when the cortisol binds only to the high-affinity receptors, the ability to lay down and retrieve memory is enhanced. When the low-affinity receptors are activated, the relationship enters the right-hand side of the U-shape and the response shifts, she adds.

The duration of stress is also important. A transient bout of stress causes a proliferation of neural stem cells and a spike in numbers of new neurons, which take at least two weeks to mature. The brain seems to be preparing itself in case a second stressor comes calling. Chronic stress is not so beneficial. It slashes investment in new neurons, prunes the tree-like shape of existing ones, and suppresses new connections.

If stress hormones remain elevated for months or years, they can stimulate physiological changes: the hippocampus shrinks and the amygdala grows, for example. Eventually, the complex feedback system that suppresses the excess secretion of cortisol is disturbed. Once this happens, the capacity to discriminate between threat levels falls away. Either everything seems threatening (anxiety) or else nothing does (depression or burnout).



Nature skrev:Old ideas that certain individuals have an inherent 'hardiness' or an innate ability to bounce back from severe stress have fallen by the wayside. Instead, resilience and our response to trauma are recognized as being more dynamic, changing throughout life. It's a complicated milieu, but one of the main ways that stress marks the brain is through epigenetics. This does not change genes, but it can change their expression by attaching methyl groups to DNA or associated proteins.



Nature skrev:As with memory, the way that sociability changes with stress is not linear. Kaufer's lab found that rats exposed to moderate stress — in this case, being immobilized in a bag — displayed more positive social behaviour, such as huddling, resource sharing and reduced aggression4. The researchers also saw an increase in the prosocial hormone oxytocin. But if the immobilized rats were exposed to fox odour, the addition of this high-level-stress inducer caused them to lose all pro-social behaviours. Oxytocin plummeted, as did its receptors. “This is really interesting because it can start to explain the social withdrawal that you can see in some psychopathologies like PTSD and depression,” Kaufer says.


http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v531/n7592_supp/full/531S18a.html

#artikel #nature #stress #kortisol #neurologi #depression #minne #beteende #hjärnan
av Onddruid
i tor mar 03 2016, 11:18
 
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Ämne: Motståndskraft mot stress, vad är det och vart kommer det ifrån?
Svar: 0
Visningar: 2128

Personer med psykisk sjukdom söker sig till partners med liknande tillstånd

The underlying reasons for these patterns are complex, and not entirely known. Nordsletten believes that the most likely explanation is assortative mating—the selection of a partner based on a shared trait or behavior.

“At a certain level, individuals feeling that their way of looking at the world is shared are drawn together,” adds Victor Reus, a psychiatrist at the University of California, San Francisco, who was not involved with the study.

Another possibility, however, is that this correlation is due to marital interaction—the process by which partners become more similar over time. “Some of the association that’s found could also be produced by one spouse’s reaction to their partner’s condition and the stress associated with it,” Reus suggests. “It may be that a partner who has chronic bipolar disorder or schizophrenia, which perhaps wasn’t evident at the onset [of the marriage], could trigger in a spouse a major depression—something that would make it look like an association after the fact but which doesn’t speak to the temporal sequence of when these disorders occurred in individuals.”



http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/disordered-pairs-people-more-likely-to-find-a-mate-with-a-similar-psychiatric-condition/

#artikel #beteende #relationer
av Onddruid
i lör feb 27 2016, 07:19
 
Sök i: Nyheter
Ämne: Personer med psykisk sjukdom söker sig till partners med liknande tillstånd
Svar: 6
Visningar: 972

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