Research
Boost Immune System
Work Pressures Help Strengthen The Immune System, Gory
Videos Do The Opposite
10-30-2001
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Engaging in stressful tasks like trying
to meet a deadline may strengthen the immune system while
exposure to stress that must be endured passively - like
watching violence on TV - may weaken it, a researcher at
the Ohio State University says.
The
conclusion is based on a study that was designed to draw
out the different effects that active and passive coping
might have on the body's defenses. It presents some of the
strongest evidence yet that certain kinds of stress can
promote good health.
"Our
findings lend scientific truth to the idea that a hassle
a day keeps the doctor away," said Jos A. Bosch, postdoctoral
fellow in oral biology at Ohio State and lead author of
the study. The work was published in the current (September-October
2001) issue of the journal Psychophysiology. Bosch did the
research in collaboration with scientists at the University
of Amsterdam, Vrije University in The Netherlands and the
Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam.
Bosch
and his colleagues conducted their experiments on a group
of 34 volunteers, all of whom were male undergraduate students.
The subjects were exposed to two different stressful experiences.
The first was a timed memory task that required the students
to memorize some given material and take a subsequent 12-minute
test. In the second activity, the subjects were shown a
gruesome 12-minute video on surgical procedures.
The difference between the two kinds of stresses -
both of which are considered acute, rather than chronic, stress -
was that participants were actively engaged in the memory task whereas
the video had to be watched passively.
To examine the effect of these stresses on the immune
system, the researchers studied the concentration of certain defense
proteins in the saliva of the subjects. These proteins - known as
immunoglobulins - are also contained in body fluids that make up the
protective outer film of organs such as the lungs. The deployment
of these immune factors inside the human body constitutes what biologists
call the secretory immune system - the first line of defense that
pathogens have to cross before invading tissues.
Bosch and his colleagues found that the memory task
caused an increase in the salivary concentration of a major immune
factor - the SIgA or secretory immunuglobulin A. The video had the
opposite effect, lowering SIgA levels in the saliva.
"It appears that the stress from engaging in
the memory task activated the subjects' immune system, whereas the
stress from watching the video caused a downregulation (or weakening)
of immunity," Bosch said.
The results suggest that deadlines and challenges
at work could be a good thing. "Even being annoyed about something,
particularly if it is for a short time, could help strengthen the
body's defenses," Bosch said.
Being exposed to violent scenes on television, on
the other hand, may suppress the immune system. The continuous replays
of the World Trade Center towers' collapse on September 11, Bosch
said, were a likely example.
While analyzing saliva samples, the researchers also
measured the concentration of a molecule that is responsible for transporting
immunoglobulins from their site of production to the saliva. Defense
proteins bind to this molecule - called secretory component (SC) -
and are carried by it into the protective fluids of the secretory
immune system.
SC concentration increased during both the memory
task and the video viewing. For the memory task, the researchers could
not conclude if the increased availability of SIgA was a result of
higher production of the immune factor or the result of increased
flow of SIgA into the saliva.
"The greater abundance of transporting molecules
means there could be higher amounts of SIgA in the saliva just from
increased transportation activity, even without an actual increase
in the production of immunoglobulin," Bosch said.
During the video, however, there was a dip in salivary
immunoglobulin inspite of increased SC concentration. This indicated
that exposure to the video suppressed the production of defense proteins
by immune cells.
As a next step, Bosch intends to investigate the mechanisms
underlying the immunological effects of active and passive coping.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by Ohio State University,
www.acs.ohio-state.edu.
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