Abstract

The old notion that stress exacerbates the progression of physical illness via its corticosteroid-mediated immunosuppressive effects must be revised. Experimental and clinical studies demonstrate that both laboratory and natural stressors alter the activities of lymphocytes and macrophages in a complex way that depends on the type of immune response, the physical and psychological characteristics of the stressor and the timing of stress relative to the induction and expression of the immune event. The influences of stress on immunity are mediated not only by glucocorticoids but also by catecholamines, endogenous opioids and pituitary hormones such as growth hormone. Sensitivity of the immune system to stress is not simply fortuitous but is an indirect consequence of the regulatory reciprocal influences that exist between the immune system and the central nervous system. The immune system receives signals from the brain and the neuroendocrine system via the autonomic nervous system and hormones and sends information to the brain via cytokines. These connections appear to be part of a long-loop regulatory feedback system that plays an important role in the coordination of behavioral and physiological responses to infection and inflammation.

Keywords

Immune systemHormoneStressorNeuroscienceImmunityCentral nervous systemImmunologyInflammationAutonomic nervous systemBiologyMedicinePsychologyEndocrinologyBlood pressure

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBiological FactorsBrainCytokinesHormonesHumansImmune ToleranceNeurotransmitter AgentsStressPhysiologicalStressPsychological

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Publication Info

Year
1989
Type
review
Volume
44
Issue
26
Pages
1995-2008
Citations
533
Access
Closed

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533
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7
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410
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Cite This

Robert Dantzer, Keith W. Kelley (1989). Stress and immunity: An integrated view of relationships between the brain and the immune system. Life Sciences , 44 (26) , 1995-2008. https://doi.org/10.1016/0024-3205(89)90345-7

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/0024-3205(89)90345-7
PMID
2568569

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%