Wellness Education
Hormonal
There are three main sources of stress that can overload the body. If
continued unchecked, emotional stress, poor lifestyle choices, and chronic
pain have a cumulative effect, making you more susceptible to allergies,
infections, inflammation, and toxicity. Chronic stress causes your adrenal
glands, which are charged with producing hormones to help you adapt to
stress, to "burn out," leading to fatigue, depression, weight gain, sugar
cravings, and hormone imbalance.
Can you recall times in your life when you felt stressed for long periods?
Below is a list of the top ten emotional stressors that contribute to
adrenal exhaustion. How many have you experienced in the past year? Think
back to your childhood: How many have you experienced throughout the course
of your lifetime?
- Death of a loved one
- Divorce or end of relationship
- Relationship difficulties, frequent arguments
- Change in residence
- Overwork, or termination of employment
- Pregnancy
- Addition to family
- Outstanding personal achievement (graduation, promotion)
- Financial stress (mortgage, loans)
- Personal injury or illness
Poor lifestyle choices also take a toll on your health. Do you engage
in any of the below habits?
- Frequent skipped meals
- Regular consumption of refined sugar (processed foods, sweets, candy,
sodas)
- Need caffeine (coffee, colas) to get going
- Too much or too little exercise
- Poor sleep habits
Pain is the most obvious response from the body that something is out
of balance. But you may also be experiencing chronic inflammation as a
result of poor diet or undetected infection. When your adrenal glands
have been functioning in overdrive for a period of time due to poor lifestyle
habits or unchecked stress, other body systems begin to suffer as a result
of the imbalance. Do you experience any the following symptoms?
- Frequent colds, infections
- Joint or muscle pain
- Allergies
- Digestive difficulties: constipation, diarrhea, bloating, indigestion
- Chemical sensitivity
Hormonal System
Your complete health analysis begins with assessment of the hormonal system provided by the Functional Adrenal Stress Profile.
Stress Hormone Lab Assessments
The first step in assessing your hormonal system's condition is to measure
the functioning of your adrenal glands with the Functional Adrenal Stress
Profile test. The saliva samples you submit to the laboratory are put
through sophisticated hormonal assays that measure the levels of cortisol
and DHEA hormones over a 24-hour period. This test analyzes how well your
body is managing stress.
Causes of Stress
The Functional Adrenal Stress Profile measures adrenal stress caused
by lifestyle issues such as working long hours, poor eating habits, lack
of exercise or lack of rest. Adrenal stress can also be caused by internal
organ dysfunction such as poor digestion or inadequate detoxification
ability. When the sum total of all your stresses reaches a critical threshold,
the adrenals react in a predicable pattern.
Symptoms of Stress
The most commonly experienced symptoms of adrenal stress include: fatigue,
depression, inability to lose weight, sweet cravings, decreased sex drive,
insomnia, poor memory, anxiety, PMS, weakened immune response, recurrent
infections, unexplained nervousness or irritability and joint or muscle
pain. As you experience these external symptoms, profound physiological
changes are taking place inside your body.
Three Stages of Burnout
Stage 1 — Stress Overload
Whatever the source of stress, your body's initial reaction is the same:
the adrenal glands make more of the stress hormones cortisol and DHEA
. This first stage of hormonal maladaptation is called hyperadrenia, or
overactivity of the adrenal glands. Normally, when the stress dissipates,
the glands have time to recondition and prepare for the next stressful
event. However, if your stress levels remain high, your body will remain
locked in this first stage of adrenal stress. If your stress hormone levels
remain elevated for extended periods of time, your body's ability to recover
can be reduced and the ability of your adrenals to make cortisol and DHEA
can be compromised.
Another way to look at this is to think of your adrenal reserve as a
savings account. If you continually withdraw money from savings and don't
replace it, you are eventually unable to recover financially. Fatigue
and other adrenal symptoms are signs that your body's reserve has been
overdrawn and your adrenals are becoming exhausted. If the stress continues,
the high levels of cortisol and DHEA begin to drop. As the high levels
of these hormones can no longer be sustained, a person enters into stage
two of adrenal exhaustion.
Stage 2 — Fatigue
Some individuals have genetically strong adrenal glands and can maintain
health under high levels of stress for many years. Others may enter into
stage two more quickly. Eventually, if we continue to experience excess
stress, we enter into stage two of adrenal exhaustion. This transition
period usually lasts between six and eighteen months during which the
stress response of the adrenal glands is gradually compromised. Under
chronic stress conditions the adrenals eventually "burn out." At this
point the glands become fatigued and can no longer sustain an adequate
response to stress. This condition ultimately leads to stage three or
hypoadrenalism.
Stage 3 — Exhaustion
In stage three of adrenal maladaptation the glands have been depleted
of their ability to produce cortisol and DHEA in sufficient amounts and
now it becomes more and more difficult for the body to recover. Constant
fatigue and low-level depression can appear in otherwise emotionally healthy
people because cortisol and DHEA help maintain mood, emotional stability
and energy levels. As cortisol and DHEA levels are depressed, people experience
depressed mental function. Brain function suffers as these hormones are
depleted. Both poor memory and mental confusion can be a direct result
of adrenal hormone depletion.
Stress and Sex Hormone Production and Sex Drive
Because all steroid hormone production is linked by biochemical pathways,
cortisol and DHEA depletion impacts the female hormones progesterone and
estrogen, as well as the predominant male hormone, testosterone. In both
men and women hormonal symptoms such as mood swings, irritability, sweet
cravings and headaches can be related to the failure of the adrenals to
adapt to stress. Female hormone symptoms such as menstrual cramping, infertility,
night sweats and hot flashes can also be adrenal related. Many women feel
they are on an emotional roller coaster with their female hormones, yet
rarely is the role the adrenals play in female hormones explored. Testosterone
levels in men also suffer as a result of weak adrenal output. Since sex
hormone levels drop as cortisol and DHEA levels drop, sex drive diminishes
in both men and women.
Bone Loss, Pain and Inflammation
When cortisol levels are abnormal due to chronic stress, bone loss can
occur. This is because excessive cortisol blocks mineral absorption. If
you are taking calcium supplements to help protect you from bone loss
and your cortisol is elevated, you will be unable to absorb the calcium.
Calcium can then precipitate in the body and deposit in joints causing
arthritis or deposit in the blood vessels increasing your risk for hardening
of the arteries. Many people experience increased neck, back and joint
pain from imbalances in cortisol.
Stress and Immune Function
Cortisol, the "stress hormone," directs the production of special immune
cells called immunocytes which produce SigA, our first line immune defense.
If cortisol values are abnormal the ability of immune cells to produce
adequate SigA is compromised. This is one reason we get sick so easily
when we are stressed. Simply put, prolonged stress results in adrenal
exhaustion and depressed first line immune defense opening the door for
opportunistic infections.
Physiological Effects of Stress
Repair (Anabolic)
The repair/breakdown or anabolic/catabolic dynamic is one of the most
important health principles. Depending on our physical and emotional health
we are at all times shifting between a repair (anabolic) or breakdown
(catabolic) state. Being in an anabolic state means you are rebuilding,
repairing, literally re-constructing your body's tissues. Being in a repair
state is like renovating a house by painting, landscaping and replacing
a leaky roof. Anabolic refers to your immune system's rebuilding processes.
When you are anabolic your body is in a state of constant regeneration,
repairing blood vessels and heart tissue, rebuilding old bone and even
destroying cancerous cells.
Breakdown (Catabolic)
The opposite process, a breakdown state, is referred to as a catabolic
state. The word catabolic is from the same Greek root as the word cataclysm,
meaning disaster. It is a well-chosen term since too much time spent in
a catabolic state has disastrous effects on your health. This breakdown
or destruction phase occurs when your body is operating under stressful
conditions and isn't able to repair itself adequately. Under catabolic
conditions we breakdown our own muscle, our own organs and our own bone.
This breakdown ultimately leads to degenerative diseases.
We maintain a strong immune system when our bodies spend more time in
repairing than breaking down. A healthy immune system prevents the development
of many chronic degenerative diseases. For example, we have cancer cells
that grow in us each day and it's our immune system's job to destroy those
cells so that tumors don't develop. Our blood vessels and heart require
constant renewal to prevent the plaquing that causes cardiovascular disease.
Our bodies are constantly breaking down and repairing bone and joint tissue;
if this breakdown process is blocked, osteoporosis and arthritis occur.
Prolonged immune system stress can lead the body to attack itself resulting
in autoimmune diseases such as lupus, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid
arthritis.
Your health status, whether you are predominantly in a repair state
or breakdown state, can be measured by a variety of lab tests. This information
allows you to address chronic degenerative diseases in their earliest
stages, long before a pathological condition has developed.
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