A new framework for understanding stress and disease: the developmental model of stress as applied to multiple sclerosis.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-06-17 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnint.2024.1365672
Michelle Fauver, Eva M Clark, Carolyn E Schwartz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper proposes a new model of stress that integrates earlier models and adds insights from developmental psychology. Previous models describe the behavioral and physical effects of stress events, but have not explained the translation of experiences into stress itself. The Developmental Model of Stress shows how psychosocial developmental challenges in childhood create persistent negative beliefs and behaviors that increase threat perception and maladaptive stress responses. These developmental challenges produce early psychological and physiological predispositions for increased stress responses over time. Ongoing stress leads to dysregulation of physical stress-response systems (allostatic load), which is associated with multiple diseases. High allostatic load provides the necessary preconditions for the diathesis-stress model, which says the addition of an acute stressor to a weakened or predisposed system can lead to disease development. The paper also documents the evolving measurement of stress to better understand the stress-disease relationship, helping to resolve conflicting results between studies. The Developmental Model of Stress was combined with clinician insight and patient reports to build an integrative framework for understanding the role of stress in the development and progression of multiple sclerosis (MS). It includes the first mapping of maladaptive beliefs and behaviors arising from developmental challenges that are common to people with MS. An initial comparison shows these may be distinct from those of people with other chronic diseases. These beliefs and behaviors form the predisposing factors and contribute to the triggering factors, which are the acute stressors triggering disease onset. These often took two forms, a prolonged incident experienced as feeling trapped or stuck, and threat of a breach in a relationship. The reinforcing factors add the stress of a chronic disease with a poor prognosis and seemingly random symptom fluctuation, still managed with the same beliefs and behaviors developed in childhood, increasing physiological dysregulation and symptom severity. A pilot study is described in which these three categories of stress factors in MS were explicitly addressed. This study noted clinically important improvements in physical and mental well-being, providing preliminary support for the Developmental Model. Future research might expand on the pilot using a more robust sample and design.

理解压力与疾病的新框架:应用于多发性硬化症的压力发展模型。
本文提出了一种新的压力模型,它整合了以前的模型,并增加了发展心理学的见解。以前的模式描述了压力事件对行为和身体的影响,但没有解释压力经历转化为压力本身的过程。压力发展模式显示了童年时期的社会心理发展挑战是如何产生持续的负面信念和行为,从而增加威胁感和适应不良的压力反应。随着时间的推移,这些发展中的挑战会产生增加压力反应的早期心理和生理倾向。持续的压力导致生理压力反应系统失调(异势负荷),与多种疾病相关。高异应激负荷为 "病因-应激 "模型提供了必要的先决条件,该模型认为,在衰弱或易患疾病的系统中加入急性应激源会导致疾病的发生。论文还记录了压力测量方法的演变,以更好地理解压力与疾病的关系,帮助解决研究结果之间的矛盾。压力发展模型与临床医生的洞察力和患者的报告相结合,建立了一个综合框架,用于理解压力在多发性硬化症(MS)的发生和发展中的作用。该模型首次描绘了多发性硬化症患者因发育挑战而产生的适应不良信念和行为。初步比较显示,这些信念和行为可能有别于其他慢性疾病患者的信念和行为。这些信念和行为形成了易感因素,并促成了诱发因素,即引发疾病的急性压力源。这些因素通常有两种形式,一种是长时间的事件,如感觉被困或被卡住,另一种是关系破裂的威胁。强化因素增加了预后不良的慢性疾病的压力,症状波动看似随机,但仍以童年时形成的相同信念和行为来管理,从而增加了生理失调和症状的严重性。本报告介绍了一项试点研究,其中明确探讨了多发性硬化症的这三类压力因素。这项研究指出,患者的身心健康得到了重要的临床改善,为发展模式提供了初步支持。未来的研究可能会使用更强大的样本和设计来扩展试点研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience Neuroscience-Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
2.90%
发文量
148
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research that synthesizes multiple facets of brain structure and function, to better understand how multiple diverse functions are integrated to produce complex behaviors. Led by an outstanding Editorial Board of international experts, this multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide. Our goal is to publish research related to furthering the understanding of the integrative mechanisms underlying brain functioning across one or more interacting levels of neural organization. In most real life experiences, sensory inputs from several modalities converge and interact in a manner that influences perception and actions generating purposeful and social behaviors. The journal is therefore focused on the primary questions of how multiple sensory, cognitive and emotional processes merge to produce coordinated complex behavior. It is questions such as this that cannot be answered at a single level – an ion channel, a neuron or a synapse – that we wish to focus on. In Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience we welcome in vitro or in vivo investigations across the molecular, cellular, and systems and behavioral level. Research in any species and at any stage of development and aging that are focused at understanding integration mechanisms underlying emergent properties of the brain and behavior are welcome.
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