Stress Release

stressed_out.jpgStress is implicated in every major degenerative disease.  Stress undermines your immune system, breaks down every tissue in your body, raises blood sugar levels and increases inflammation everywhere in your body, making you more susceptible to infections, heart attack, stroke, cancer and all the major killers of our time.  By too much stress we mean elevated levels of the adrenal hormone, cortisol.  Fortunately there are many effective methods of combating the stress in your life.

Too much stress is the root cause of a large portion of chronic health conditions. Triangle.gif

We can think of stress in terms of the Triangle of Health .

Structural Stress

  • Physical work or exercise
  • Heat or cold stress
  • Pain
  • Lack of sleep

Biochemical Stress

  • Energy Psychology

    There are many effective techniques for reducing stress over any issue.  These are techniques you can learn nd use on your own, or you can get help and coaching.  I regularly teach them to my patients.  Among the techniques are:
    TAT -Tapas Acupressure Technique
    EFT - Emotional Freedom Technique
    PKP - Professional Kinesiology Practice
    ART - Awareness Release Technique
    HeartMath - Institute of HeartMath Techniques
    Prayer and Meditation

  • Poor Diet
  • Allergies
  • Disease/infection
  • Dysbiosis
  • Oxidative stress/Inflammation
  • Toxins
  • Any physiologic stress

 Mental/Emotional Stress

  • Worry/fear
  • Anger/Resent;ment
  • Grief/Loss
  • Too much mental effort

A Mind/Body Connection
The adrenal glands are  two  small  glands which sit on top of your kidneys near the base of the rib cage in the back.  They are directly wired into the autonomic nervous system and respond to hormones produced in the brain by the pituitary gland.  

Short Term Stress Produces Adrenalin epinephrine.jpg
Every time your body experiences too much stress there is a reaction in the base of the brain which signals the adrenal glands to produce stress hormones.    Anything, good or bad, happy or sad, which gets you excited with cause a rush of adrenalin, increasing your pulse and heart output, dilating your pupils, increasing respiration and shutting down such things as digestion and the immune system.

 

 

Cortisol: Too Much or Too Little Can Cause Serious Problems 

Balance is the Key

Adrenalin is short acting. When the stress continues for hours, days, months or years, the adrenal glands produce cotrisol, a steroid hormone, related to the sex hormones.  Cortisol is vital to life.  But modern life tends to cause long term stress and overproduction of cortisol.  

Excess Cortisol calder_mobile.jpg

  • Increases  blood sugar and can make you fat
  • Inhibits healing and increases your risk of injuries 
  • Depresses the immune system and makes you more prone to infection
  • Causes estrogen dominance in both men and women
  •  Eventually leads to burnout and low cortisol levels

Too Little Cortisol

  • Is the result of stress to the point that the adrenals can no longer adapt
  • Causes fatigue
  • Is often associated with hypoglycemia (low blood sugar)
  • Is associated with depression,, fatigue and sleep disorders

Cortisol is Closely Related to Blood Sugar Handling Problems

 

When you eat any carbohydrate, and this includes sugars, grains, and starchy foods, the pancreas produces insulin which moves the sugars from you blood into the cells.  Our bodies are really not designed to handle large doses of simple sugars.  So the pancreas tends to overshoot and produce too much insulin.  This results in a sugar crash, typically a few hours later.  When blood sugars drop, the adrenals pump out cortisol (called in this case glucocorticoids) which bring blood sugar back up by signaling the liver to make more sugars from stored starches and proteins. 

 So if you are on a sugar roller coaster, you are not only stressing your pancreas but you are also stressing your adrenal glands.  Eventually they both will fail.  When the pancreas fails it is called diabetes.  

Cortisol Has a Normal Daily Rhythm
Normally, the cortisol levels in your blood are at their highest just before you wake and gradually decrease through the day until it's time to sleep. They should be opposite to melatonin levels, since this is the hormone regulating sleep.  Stress, worry, overwork, irregular sleep habits and particularly not eating regular meals all can cause this daily rhythm to be thrown out of balance.  This can result in being tired in the morning and not being able to sleep at night.

Cortisol Levels Affect All Other Hormones
High cortisol can interfere with the conversion of the thyroid hormone to its active form, thus producing a functional hypothyroidism that is often missed on standard lab tests.  So high stress can make you effectively hypothyroid.

Cortisol is a steroid hormone made from the same precursors as all the sex hormones.  All the sex hormones are made from pregnenolone.  If you are putting out lots of cortisol, all the pregnenolone is going down that pathway and you may become deficient in other hormones.  This is why many women are deficient in progesterone, which is necessary to balance estrogens.  Low estrogen is implicated in endometriosis, cystic breasts, ovarian cysts, fibroid tumors and female cancers.  Similarly, high stress can reduce testosterone in both men and women. 

Adrenal Testing
In my clinic I frequently order adrenal salivary hormone tests.  We collect four samples of your saliva; first thing in the morning, before noon, afternoon and before bed.  This gives us a snapshot of how your cortisol levels change through a typical day. 

Interventions
The foundation of all treatment is lifestyle:

  • Exercise: The right kind of exercise can help balance cortisol and insulin imbalances.  On the other hand too much or the wrong kind can make the problem worse.
  • Diet: A low carb diet, with adequate protein, rich in antioxidants and with a balance of essential fatty acids is essential for correcting hormone imbalances of all kinds.
  • Handling Emotional Stress: Many patients need "vitamin N:" learn to say no.  Take care of yourself.  Get adequate rest and sleep. Learn some of the tools we teach to release tension.  The energy psychology techniques (see box above) are very helpful in reducing the emotional component of stress.

A Variety of Non-Toxic Remedies:
Supplements can help balance too high, too low or dysregulated cortisol levels.  It is important to find and handle the source of the problem.  Chronic stress can produce many other imbalances and can eventually result in serious disease conditions including heart disease, diabetes, hormonal imbalance, back and neck pain and joint degeneration. 

Neurotransmitter Support is a rapidly developing filed. Stress is actually a brain phenomenon and modifying the stress response in the brain using simple amino acids and herbal compounds can provide immediate help in handling stress and help with overall healing.

 If you or someone you know is overwhelmed by the stress of life there is help.  Call my office for a free, brief consultation to see how you can start to feel yourself again.

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Linkds to related articles on this site:

 

tapas.jpgTAT is a self-care technique which is demonstrating effectiveness in the treatment of traumatic stress, allergic reactions, and fixed negative emotional and mental states.  I regularly use it in my practice to help patients move through blocks in their health and in their lives.  And I use myself.  This technique was developed by Tapas Flemming (left) who is an acupuncturist and a dear friend. more...

 

 

 

EFT - Empic_about_eft_meridian.jpgotional Freedom Technique  EFT is a simple technique that you can learn in minutes but that can change your life.  I have been teaching it to patients for years so that they can help themselves.  It has been used by thousands of people all over the world.  It's easy to learn so here we go: more...

 

 

 

 

 
new-heart.jpgHeart Focused Techniques
were developed by Institute of HeartMath® to Relieve Stress, Enhance Performance, Improve Decision-Making, and Promote Health. They have been tested in many settings including education and industry.  These techniques include simple ways of reducing stress in the moment as well as high tech training systems.  The Institute of HeartMath has done wonderful research demonstrating that a shift in the heart can produce changes in the electromagnetic field within and extending far beyond your body. more..

 

 

stressed_out.jpgStress Release Stress is implicated in every major degenerative disease.  Stress undermines your immune system, breaks down every tissue in your body, raises blood sugar levels and increases inflammation everywhere in your body, making you more susceptible to infections, heart attack, stroke, cancer and all the major killers of our time.  By too much stress we mean elevated levels of the adrenal hormone, cortisol.  Fortunately there are many effective methods of combating the stress in your life. more...

 

 

mmt.jpgKinesiology and Emotional Stress Release People are frequently stuck emotionally because of childhood pain "due to the unconsciousness into which we were born," in the words of Ekhart Tolle.* This pain creates a block to the natural flow of energy in the mind and body. It is held not only at the level of thought but is literally a feeling; that is, it is held and experienced as body sensation. Such sensation/thought complexes are the very things which hold us back in life, create problems in relationships and can cause sickness, pain and even injuries. more..

 

  

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Overcoming Fear Fear is a question: What are you afraid of, and why? Just as the seed of health is in illness, because illness contains information, your fears are a treasure house of self-knowledge if you explore them. 
Marilyn Ferguson, author of The Brain Revolution  more..

 
 
 

 Some related research (these are  links to outside websites will open in a new window):

Does Stress Damage The Brain?  "The gray matter density of the pregenual anterior cingulate cortex, an area of the brain involved in emotional functioning, was reduced in veterans with PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder), but not in their twins who had not experienced combat."

National Institutes of Health Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
State-of-the-Science Consultatio
n
  
"Many CFS symptoms could be explained by changes in HPA (hypothalamus- pituitary- adrenal) axis function or regulation."

Uncontrollable Stress Worsens Symptoms Of Endometriosis  “These findings contribute to our understanding of how stress may affect the severity of endometriosis. We think there is likely a connection with the immune system because of the observed levels of mast cells in the colon and the increased levels of inflammatory cells in the peritoneum of the affected rats, since this has also been observed in patients with endometriosis.” 

Decreased ACTH and Cortisol Responses to Stress in Healthy Adults Reporting Significant Childhood Maltreatment  "The main finding of this study was suppression of cortisol response to a standardized laboratory psychosocial stressor among healthy adults reporting significant childhood maltreatment, relative to healthy controls reporting none."

Psychophysiological and Cortisol Responses to Psychological Stress in Depressed and Nondepressed Older Men and Women With Elevated Cardiovascular Disease Risk  "Older depressed subjects with elevated risk for CVD (cardopvascular disease) exhibited a hypocortisol ( response to acute stress (that is they produce too little cortisol). This impaired cortisol response might contribute to chronic inflammation (as reflected in the elevated C-reactive proteins in depressed patients) and in other ways increase CVD risk

Stress Increases Cocaine Addiction  "Not everyone is genetically sensitive to addiction, but stress is certainly a risk factor to which we must pay more attention in people who are in danger of becoming addicted to cocaine."

Hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis and cortisol in young women with primary fibromyalgia: the potential roles of depression, fatigue, and sleep disturbance in the occurrence of hypocortisolism  The study found "low cortisol concentrations in young women with fibromyalgia."


 
© 2008 George Manlove, DC   All rights reserved. 

Disclaimer: The entire contents of this website are based upon the opinions of Dr. Manlove, unless otherwise noted. The information on this website is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional and is not intended as medical advice. It is intended as a sharing of knowledge and information from the research and experience of Dr. Manlove. Dr. Manlove encourages you to make your own health care decisions based upon your research and in partnership with a qualified health care professional.

 These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Products discussed in these articles are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.  If you are pregnant, nursing, taking medication, or have a medical condition, consult your physician before using any product.