Stress and anxiety can substantially worsen reaction to routine allergens
A new study shows that even slight stress and anxiety
can substantially worsen a person's allergic reaction to some routine allergens.
Moreover, the added impact of stress and anxiety seem to linger, causing the second
day of a stressed person's allergy attack to be much worse.
In a report presented at the annual meeting of the American
Psychological Association in Boston, Ohio State University researchers described
recent experiments meant to gauge how psychological stress might affect allergy
sufferers.
"Allergies are not minor problems," explained Jan Kiecolt-Glaser,
a professor of psychology and psychiatry at Ohio State. "A huge number of people
suffer from allergies and, while hay fever, for example, is generally not life-threatening,
allergy sufferers often also have asthma which can be deadly."
Some data suggest that 38 percent of the people who suffer
from allergic rhinitis also have asthma, and that 78 percent of asthma sufferers
have allergic rhinitis.
Kiecolt-Glaser and Ronald Glaser, professor of molecular
virology, immunology and medical genetics at Ohio State, recruited 28 men and
women. All of the volunteers had a history of hay fever and seasonal allergies.
The volunteers spent two half-days in a research unit
at the Ohio State Medical Center. Each time, they were given the standard skin
prick test several times to determine their reactions to various allergens, and
blood, saliva and serum samples were taken before, after and at several times
during the research project.
All of the participants were given a battery of psychological
questionnaires to determine their levels of stress, anxiety, self-confidence and
feelings of control over situations. On the day that individuals were assigned
to the low-stress control condition, they were given the skin prick test and then
asked to read from a magazine. Then they were asked to tape themselves reading
the same material aloud.
During the day that people were assigned to the experimental
condition, however, they had a much tougher time.
"We used a 'speech stressor test' used in a lot of psychology
research," Kiecolt-Glaser said. "Basically the participants each appeared before
a panel of several 'evaluators' who supposedly were behavioral experts. Participants
had to give a 10-minute speech, which was videotaped, and then are asked a series
of math questions they had to solve without paper or pen."
Afterwards, they had to watch their videotaped performance.
"The whole exercise is a nice stress experiment in the
laboratory," she said.
The researchers measured the raised "wheals" that formed on the arms of the participants
before and after they were stressed, as well as the next day.
"The wheals on a person who was moderately anxious because
of the experiment were 75 percent larger after the experiment, compared to that
same person's response on the day when they were not stressed," Kiecolt-Glaser
said, signifying a stronger reaction.
"But people who were highly anxious had wheals that were
twice as big after they were stressed compared to their response when they were
not stressed. Moreover, these same people were four times more likely to have
a stronger reaction to the skin test one day later after the stress," she said.
This next-day change - labeled a "late-phase reaction"
- is important because it signals an ongoing and strengthening response to the
allergens, and even suggests that sufferers may react strongly to other stimuli
that previously hadn't caused them to develop an allergic reaction.
Gailen Marshall, a co-investigator on the project and
professor of medicine and pediatrics at the University of Mississippi, said that
late phase, or delayed, reactions are typically unresponsive to the most common
forms of allergy treatment, such as antihistamines.
"Late phase reactions also occur in allergic asthma and
can, in the proper settings, be potentially life-threatening.
"The results of this study should alert practitioners
and patients alike to the adverse effects of stress on allergic reactions in the
nose, chest, skin and other organs that may seemingly resolve within a few minutes
to hours after starting, but may reappear the next day when least expected," he
said.
Partner Ronald Glaser, director of the University's Institute
for Behavioral Medicine Research, said that they stimulated cells taken from study
participants and then measured the levels of cytokines like interleukin-6 (IL-6)
that the cells produced.
Lymphocytes taken from participants during the study
showed increased levels of cytokines like IL-6. High levels of IL-6 are part of
the allergic response to an allergen, Glaser said. The researchers also measured
levels catecholamines and they were elevated as well.
He suggests that the raised levels of these compounds
are to blame for the residual effects seen in the late-phase reaction.
"What's interesting about this is that it shows that
being stressed can cause a person's allergies to worsen the next day," she explained.
"This is clinically important for patients since most
of what we do to treat allergies is to take antihistamines to control the symptoms
- runny nose, watery, itchy eyes, and congestion. "Antihistamines don't deal with
those symptoms on the next day."
People may be setting themselves up to have more persistent
problems by being stressed and anxious when allergy attacks begin," Kiecolt-Glaser
said.
Working along with Kiecolt-Glaser, Glaser and Marshall
on the project were William Malarkey, professor of internal medicine; Stanley
Lemeshow, professor and dean of public health; Kathi Heffner from Ohio University;
Kyle Porter, Cathie Atkinson and Byron Laskowski, all from Ohio State.
The research was supported in part by the National Institutes
of Health.
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