While
researching the effects of depression and stress on the heart, I thought about
Dr. Hans Selye with his pioneering research on stress and distress. Dr. Selye
was born in Europe and achieved his Doctor of Medicine and Chemistry in Prague.
During his illustrious career , he was
affiliated with Johns Hopkins University, McGill University and the
University of Montréal.
Dr. Selye
believed that stress was an everyday experience. He hypothesized that the body
responded in a stereotyped manner with identical biological changes to
stressors. Stressors include heat, cold, lifting rocks, running 50 K’s, going
without food, having sex, working etc. Regardless of the stressors, the
biological changes are characterized by enlargement and hyperactivity of the
adrenal cortex, shrinkage or atrophy of the thymus gland and lymph nodes, along
with the appearance of gastrointestinal ulcers. Adding to the ideas of Walter
B. Cannon, the organism physiologically was often in a state of homeostasis.
With stress, the body is no longer in homeostasis but adapts, adjusts and attempts
to regain homeostasis.
Selye
established a model referred to as the General Adaptation Syndrome [GAS] that took
into account the body’s organ changes caused by cold, heat, infection, trauma,
hemorrhage, nervous irritation etc. There are three stages in Selye’s GAS model.
Stage 1. The alarm reaction in which the body shows the changes characteristic
of its first exposure to a stressor.
Hormones cortisol, epinephrine and norepinephrine are produced along
with the fight or flight response. Stage 2. Resistance occurs as a result of
continued exposure to a stressor and is compatible with adaptation. Stage
3. Exhaustion follows as a result of too
long of a continuous exposure to the same stressor to which the body became
adjusted. Eventually adaptation energy is exhausted. Signs of the alarm
reaction or distress occurs but now it’s too late, irreversible and can lead to
death.
Dr. Selye suggested
that there was superficial, deep, adaption and finite energy. In other words, stressors
can be withstood [resistance] for just so long because the body subsequently
reaches an exhaustion state. He also believed that a stressor does damage over
time and leaves its chemical scar. As a result of accidental conditioning, various
body parts such as heart, kidney, brain, gastrointestinal tract can become
affected. Eventually, the weakest body link breaks down first. With the
breakdown, the body goes in and out of homeostasis but the adaptation process leaves
an indelible mark over one’s lifetime.
Dr. Selye stated
there was a close association between work, stress and aging. He stated that aging
results from the sum of all the stresses to which the body had been exposed
during lifetime. With aging, there are irreversible scars that accumulate as
evidenced by tissue damage, and the loss of elasticity of connective tissues.
However, as far as endurance was concerned, the body’s superficial energy can be replenished after
rest or with some activity diversion. In the end, the body breaks down to the
stage of exhaustion or death.
According to
this pioneer, distress affects the body, brain, heart, liver etc. throughout
our lives. One way to reduce the lifetime of chemical scars, is to minimize
stress in our lives. Selye identified notables such as Pablo Casals, Winston
Churchill, Haile Selassie, Albert Schweitzer and numerous others who enjoyed their creative working pursuits.
Simply put, find work that you enjoy and that allows you to be successful. To
combat the physical decay of senility, Selye either swam or rode his bicycle
for an hour, every day at 5 AM.
PS
I found in the April 15, 2019 edition of Time “Listening to
uplifting dance music may help you get over a cold. The 2008 study by
researchers in Germany said 50 minutes of the music cut volunteers levels of
the stress hormone cortisol and boosted antibodies.” Further, I received in the
mail a continuing education class titled “Mindfulness and Stress Reduction.”
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