Follow The Stir

Health Check

Chronic Stress Can Really Drive You Crazy

by Jacqueline Burt on June 27, 2012 at 2:22 PM

stress reduction We already knew stress was hazardous to our health for about a billion reasons. Now here's one more (just for fun!): Chronic stress can lead to mood disorders. Awesome. So being stressed makes us biologically MORE stressed and unhappy?! That just doesn't seem fair! Unfortunately, it's true: A recent study found that chronic stress can block a gene called neuritin, which can create brain conditions such as depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and the need to eat people's faces off (just kidding about that last one).

Seriously though, this explains a lot, doesn't it? No wonder everybody seems just a bit on edge these days. We're all stressed out, whether or not we realize it. To live in a state of chronic stress is considered normal by society's standards, but our brains, apparently, are not fooled. Yo, we aren't wired for all this multitasking crap! Chill out or we're gonna burn out!

There is, at least, a silver lining to this recent discovery ...

Since researchers were able to pinpoint the neuritin gene's role in mood disorders, they should be able to develop more effective treatments. In the study, boosting neuritin production in depressed rats worked just as well as administering antidepressants.

Still, wouldn't the best way to eliminate mood disorders be to prevent them from developing in the first place? More than anything else, doesn't this study serve as yet another wake-up call? Stress is bad, mkay? So we need to figure out a way to live less stressful lives. Easier said than done, I know. But considering the current state of affairs -- dude, people are so stressed they think the zombie apocalypse might actually be coming -- I don't think we have a choice.

Do you think stress affects your moods?


Image via Eamon Curry/Flickr

Filed Under: mental health, stress

Comments

3
  • AI
    -- Nonmember comment from

    AI

    June 27, 2012 at 3:01 PM
    I feel that this article contains some misinformation. The linked article doesn't state that mood disorders are caused by stress, it states that chronic stress can create changes associated with mood disorders -not the disorders themselves. It also is focused a lot more on using findings as a new targeting point for treatment rather than implying that lowering stress is a form of prevention. As a person with bipolar disorder, the linked article offers interesting insights, but the article here makes me wonder that the author really understands what the other was about. Causes for mood disorders are complex and little understood at this point. Bipolar has genetic links, but is not always passed on. Until the causes are much clearer (stress is definitely not the only culprit), investing in new, more effective treatment options is a great way to go -I've already exhausted most treatment options as it is.
  • CPN322
    --

    CPN322

    June 27, 2012 at 4:27 PM

    Al - I found your response more interesting than the article and I agree.

    I've had to deal with depression and anxiety since I was a kid, and I definitely wasn't stressed as a child but I do think it makes it worse. 


  • neeke
    -- Nonmember comment from

    neeke

    July 2, 2012 at 10:19 AM
    To live in a state of chronic stress is considered normal by society's standards Really. Not really. nobody expects a person to run around crazy all the time. because that's what chronic stress. time to see a counselor if this describes you.
1-3 of 3 comments

To leave a comment, log in as a CafeMom member:

Log In

OR, use our non-member comment form: