Research
Boost Immune System
Shyness Can Be Deadly
12-17-2003
How you react to stress influences how easily you resist
or succumb to disease, including viruses like HIV, discovered
UCLA AIDS Institute scientists. Reported in the Dec.15 edition
of Biological Psychiatry, the new findings identify the
immune mechanism that makes shy people more susceptible
to infection than outgoing people.
"Since
ancient Greece, physicians have noticed that persons with
a 'melancholic temperament' are more vulnerable to viral
infections," said Steve Cole, principal investigator
and assistant professor of hematology-oncology at the David
Geffen School of Medicine and a member of the UCLA AIDS
Institute.
"During
the AIDS epidemic, researchers found that introverted people
got sick and died sooner than extroverted people,"
said Bruce Naliboff, co-author and a clinical professor
at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and Veterans Affairs
Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System. "Our study pinpoints
the biological mechanism that connects personality and disease."
The
UCLA team studied the effect of stress on viral replication
in a group of 54 HIV?infected men. All of the men were still
in the early stages of the disease and in good health. Each
possessed high T-cell counts with detectable levels of virus
in the blood.
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The researchers put each man through a series of stress
tests in the lab to measure the response of their autonomic nervous
system. First, the scientists monitored the subject's response to
a tiny stimulus, such as an unexpected beeping sound. They measured
his heart rate, skin moisture and dilation of the blood vessels, which
contract during stress to reroute blood to the legs for fight or flight.
"Shy persons didn't adapt to the beeps as fast
as other people," Cole said. "Their heightened nervous system
response indicated that the sound was more irritating to them."
Next, each man was required to perform physical exercises,
such as deep breathing or standing from a seated position, both of
which require the nervous system to adapt quickly. Finally, scientists
asked each man to perform rapid mental arithmetic, replying curtly
if the subject provided the wrong answer and requiring him to start
over.
To gauge the subject's overall "stress personality,"
the UCLA team ranked each man by totaling his nervous system's reactions
during two physical and mental testing periods.
To assess the link between nervous system activity
and HIV progression, for 12 to 18 months the scientists also monitored
each man's HIV viral load and T-cells, which AIDS destroys.
During the evaluation period, some of the research
subjects began antiretroviral drug therapy. The researchers studied
these men's responses to the drugs by tracking their viral loads and
T-cell counts. A boost in T-cells shows recovery from HIV on antiretroviral
drugs.
"We found a strong linear relationship between
personality and HIV replication rate in the body," Cole said.
"Shy people with high stress responses possessed higher viral
loads."
The researchers were surprised to find that the antiretroviral
drugs barely made a dent in the shy patients' disease. Instead of
showing lower viral loads, the immune systems of introverted subjects
replicated the virus between 10 to 100 times as fast as in other patients.
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main homepage.Is this"Shy patients on drug therapy didn't experience
even a 10-fold drop in their viral load," said Naliboff, co-director
of the UCLA Center for Neurovisceral Sciences and Women's Health.
"Doctors classify that as a treatment failure. The drugs should
shrink HIV replication by at least 100?fold."
"Our findings suggest that high nervous system
activity helps the virus continue replicating," Cole said. "Patients
with high-stress personalities continued to lose T-cells -- even on
the best drug therapy available. Stress sabotages their battle against
this lethal disease."
"It looks as though sensitive people are simply
wired to respond to stress more strongly than resilient people,"
Naliboff said. "How someone reacts to stress seems to be more
important than the stress itself in explaining why one person gets
sick and one person doesn't."
"This heightened stress response is the equivalent
of waves striking a stone on the beach," Cole said. "One
wave won't do much damage. But the constant pounding of waves eventually
grinds that stone to sand. That's how continual stress response wears
down the immune system."
Previously the UCLA team found that the body under
stress releases a chemical called norepinephrine that leaves the T-cells
open to infection and accelerates HIV replication. The researchers'
next step will be to try and change shy persons' physiologic response
to stress using drugs that block norepinephrine's impact on T-cells.
"Our current study suggests that the body's production
of norepinephrine during stress makes a big difference in people trying
to fight off infection," Cole said.
Margaret Kemeny, John Fahey and Jerome Zack co-authored
the article. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,
UCLA Center for AIDS Research, Universitywide AIDS Research Program,
and Veterans Affairs Medical Research funded the study.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by University Of
California - Los Angeles, www.ucla.edu.
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