Rapid changes in cellular immunity following a confrontational role-play stressor.
Brain Behav Immun
; 9(3): 207-19, 1995 Sep.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-8590818
Recent laboratory studies have shown several immune system changes consistently associated with brief stress including increases in circulating natural killer (NK) cell numbers, increases in NK cell cytotoxicity (NKCC), increases in suppressor cytotoxic (CD8) T cell numbers, and decreases in the in vitro proliferative response to mitogen stimulation. In the present study, we use a confrontational role-play, which brings out responses varying from assertion to capitulation and examine the psychological, behavioral, physiological, and immune system responses to this task compared to a resting control task. Compared to the control condition, the brief confrontational role-play led to significant subjective and physiological arousal and increases in circulating NK (CD16, CD56) as well as large granular lymphocyte (CD57) cells and suppressor/cytotoxic T cells (CD8). There were also significant relationships between stress-related increases in the cardiovascular measures and the numbers of circulating NK cells. These findings support sympathetic nervous system activation as a primary mechanism for increases in NK cell numbers under challenge. These role-play results are generally consistent with those from other laboratory tasks such as mental arithmetic. However, in contrast to previously examined brief stressors, the role-play led to decreased NKCC adjusted for percentage of NK cells. This apparent differential change in NK cytotoxicity across different types of activating experimental tasks points to the importance of examining dimensions of the behavioral and emotional response to challenge or threat in addition to that of autonomic arousal.
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Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Desempenho de Papéis
/
Estresse Psicológico
/
Células Matadoras Naturais
/
Linfócitos
Limite:
Adult
/
Humans
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Male
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
1995
Tipo de documento:
Article