Psychosocial stress increases inflammatory markers and alters cytokine production across pregnancy
Not exact matches
Previous research has linked
psychosocial risk factors like
stress, anger, and hostility to
increased risk of health problems such as heart attacks, stroke, and high blood pressure.
Scientists have long known that chronic exposure to
psychosocial stress early in life can lead to an
increased vulnerability later in life to diseases linked to immune dysfunction and chronic inflammation.
The adult age - related clinical syndrome of growth hormone deficiency includes
increased fat mass, decreased muscle mass and strength, decreased bone density, elevated lipids, insulin resistance, decreased
psychosocial well - being and depression, fatigue,
increased social isolation, inability to handle
stress, cardiovascular disease, memory decline, overall deterioration in quality of life, frailty, thin dry skin,
increased wrinkles, and diminished exercise tolerance.
The scale of natural disasters has also
increased because of deforestation, environmental degradation, urbanization, and intensified climate variables.20 The distinctive health, behavioral, and
psychosocial needs of children subject them to unique risks from these events.21 Extreme weather events place children at risk for injury, 22 loss of or separation from caregivers, 21 exposure to infectious diseases, 23 and a uniquely high risk of mental health consequences, including posttraumatic
stress disorder, depression, and adjustment disorder.24 Disasters can cause irrevocable harm to children through devastation of their homes, schools, and neighborhoods, all of which contribute to their physiologic and cognitive development.25
As the Adverse Childhood Experience Study score
increased, so did the number of risk factors for the leading causes of death.16, 17 Shonkoff uses the phrase «toxic
stress» to describe high cumulative
psychosocial risk in the absence of supportive caregiving18, 19; this type of unremitting
stress ultimately compromises children's ability to regulate their
stress response system effectively and can lead to adverse long - term structural and functional changes in the brain and elsewhere in the body.
Membership in a single - parent family or stepfamily is associated with
increased levels of significant behavioral, emotional, and academic problems in children.1, 2 The mechanisms underlying this connection are likely to involve, among other factors, financial adversity,
increased stress directly related to family transitions, and
increased exposure to additional
psychosocial risks.3, 4 Compared with the extensive research base connecting family type (ie, membership in a 2 - parent biological family, stepfamily, or single - parent family) and children's psychological adjustment, little is known about the physical health consequences of membership in diverse family types.
Toxic
stress disrupts healthy brain development, which can lead to
increase physical and mental illness, high - risk behaviors, and other
psychosocial implications.
In face of historic, biological and
psychosocial differences that men and women tackle, and
stressing the changes that emerged with the
increase of female workforce, new gender equity roles in many Western countries and new family configurations, this study aims at investigating the relationship between romantic relationship satisfaction and love components in Sternberg's (1986) model among Brazilian men and women.
Increased volume in this brain region is associated with more optimal development of a number of psychosocial factors (e.g., stress reactivity).15 Links between early responsive parenting and increased volume in the hippocampal region also suggest that the early developmental period is an important time to facilitate responsive parenting practices, especially in high risk families, in order to enhance the parent - child rela
Increased volume in this brain region is associated with more optimal development of a number of
psychosocial factors (e.g.,
stress reactivity).15 Links between early responsive parenting and
increased volume in the hippocampal region also suggest that the early developmental period is an important time to facilitate responsive parenting practices, especially in high risk families, in order to enhance the parent - child rela
increased volume in the hippocampal region also suggest that the early developmental period is an important time to facilitate responsive parenting practices, especially in high risk families, in order to enhance the parent - child relationship.
Increased psychosocial stress and decreased mucosal immunity in children with recurrent upper respiratory tract infections
They also only reviewed
psychosocial risk factors, e.g. those associated with
increased (di)
stress levels, and did not include any positive emotional outcome measures of emotional adjustment such as well - being, positive affect, happiness or life satisfaction, which are just as significant to health and for quality of life as the prevalence of negative emotions (Folkman and Moskowitz, 2000; Steptoe and Wardle, 2005; Rutten et al., 2013).