HPA Axis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the normal response in an acute stress situation

A

a reaction associated with fear which prepares the body to flee or fight

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2
Q

general steps in the HPA

A

stress –> CRH relased from the hypothalamus –> ACTH released from the pituitary into the peripheral circulation–> cortisol released by the adrenal cortex –> cortisol binds to glucocorticoid receptors taht are present in every nucleated cell

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3
Q

what are the effected regions in chronic stress situations

A

the hippocampus and cerebral cortex

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4
Q

what are some effects of chronic stress

A

decreased number of glucocorticoid receptors in the hypothalamus
change in size of adrenal cortex via hypertrophy
decreased number of glial cells
effect on mood control and ability to experience pleasure

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5
Q

role of glial cells

A

important for controlling fear, regulating motivation and controlling impulses

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6
Q

steady state and how chronic stress affects it

A

The HPA axis potentiates inhibition of actions when a new acute stressor occurs in the state of chronic stress so that when it is removed the body will stay at this new increased or decreased steady state value. Once equilibrium has been established, the body seeks to stay near this new point.

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7
Q

important findings of chronic stress and depression

A

One does not lead to the other; there is just more vulnerability for depression with chronic stress. There has been hippocampal atrophy shown in individuals with depression
Those with chronic stress have difficulty changing the way they think to get out of the depression

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8
Q

forms of treatment for chronic stress and depression

A

• Antidepressants are able to increase neurogenesis (increase the rate of formation of new neurons) and synaptogenesism in the hippocampus
• Exercise can improve mood and promote neurogenesis in hippocampus
o Serves as a neural protective factor
• Electroshock therapy

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9
Q

what is the most effective treatment for depression and chronic stress

A

talk therapy, exercise and medication combo

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10
Q

physiology of anxiety involving the prefrontal cortex

A

• The prefrontal cortex has become impaired by high levels of glucocorticoids
o Therefore stress control mechanism is damaged and any new emotional stimulus is resistant to extinction

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11
Q

role of the prefrontal cortex

A

acts as a brake on the amygdala

fear modulation and emotional balance

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12
Q

treatment for anxiety

A

o Treatment involves cognitive behavioral therapy that “extinguish” the underlying fear; not by getting rid of it but associating it with a good stimulus

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13
Q

cause of FM

A

Genetic factors

“environmental” factors such as external stressors (man made)

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14
Q

cause of chronic fatigue syndrome

A

No cause has been determined

Current theory focuses on interplay between infections, immune system and HPA

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15
Q

pathophysiology of FM

A

Pathophysiology Pain or early life stress leads to HPA dysfunction/neuroendocrine abnormalities
• Childhood stressors and “adult” stresses
o Exposure amount and time increase the risk of FM
o “man-made” are more likely to trigger
o Time off from work/inactivity can trigger FM
o Victims of unavoidable accidents have higher frequency of FM
o Daily hassles are more capable of causing symptoms
• Stress response is inappropriately triggered by everyday occurrences that change the “set point”
• Absence of descending pain
o Normal EK but decreased serotonin
• Increased central sensitization
o 3x amount of substance P
o Glutamate levels 2x higher

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16
Q

hallmarks of FM and chronic fatigue

A

pain and fatigue

17
Q

symptoms of FM

A
Pain
•	Diffuse
•	 waxes and wanes
•	Migratory
•	Dysthesisas/parasthesia
Fatigue 
Chronic widespread pain (primary symp)
Sleep disturbance/ waking unrefreshed
Cognitive symptoms
•	Problems with attention and memory
Diffuse hyperalgesia
     -increased pain to normally painful stimuli

Allodynia
-pain to normally nonpainful stimuli

18
Q

criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome

A

 Unexplained, persistent disabling fatigue for at least 6 months that is not alleviated by rest
 Short term memory impairments
 Sore thoart
 Tender lymph nodes
 Muscle pain without swelling or redness
 Headaches of a new type
 Unrefreshing sleep
 20-50% have one or more of the following symptoms such as abdominal pain, alcohol intolerance, bloating, chest pain…..

19
Q

prognosis for FM

A

Depends;

Some have very good while others have long-term disability

20
Q

prognosis for chronic fatigue

A

Highly variable
Some will be homebound
Some will improve so they can return to work
But full recovery is in only 5-10%

21
Q

treatment for FM

A

Strong evidence for tricyclics, SNRI/NSRI, cardiovascular exercise, cognitive behavior therapy, pt. education (some strength training is ok)
Opioids, NSAIDS, corticosteroids , acupuncture, massage therapy are NOT effective

22
Q

treatment for Chronic fatigue

A

Combination of drug and nondrug treatment

Never overdo it during exercise
Gentle stretching
Nutritional supplementation

23
Q

FM ratio

A

Women more likely in clinical samples because they tend to seek treatment more than men; overall population based samples are equal in diagnosis