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Psychological Stress, Immunity, and Immune Depression

1993
The opportunity to present a Special Lecture at this International Conference on Drugs of Abuse, Immunity and AIDS is a privilege, and I am most grateful to Drs. Friedman, Klein and Specter for the honor they have accorded me. However, to ferret out an area for presentation that does not contain information presented by other speakers in this session ...
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Inflammation and Immune Markers in Psychological Health

The FASEB Journal, 2020
There has been a growing emphasis on the relationship between inflammatory responses, gut microbiota and the immune system, and their influence on mental health outcomes. Stress can influence the composition of gut microbiota which, in turn, influences the central nervous systems response to future stressors. C‐
Jamie L. Scholl   +9 more
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Immune, Endocrine, and Psychological Responses in Civilians Displaced by War

Psychosomatic Medicine, 2000
The objectives of this study were to assess the influence of trauma caused by forced expulsion from home in a war-ravaged region on the psychological, hormonal, and immune responses in displaced persons and to analyze the relationships between psychometric, hormonal, and immunologic variables.Participants were 20 displaced and 14 control women ...
Dekaris, Dragan   +7 more
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SOCIO‐PSYCHOLOGICAL DETERMINANTS OF INFANT IMMUNIZATION

Decision Sciences, 1975
This paper applies factor analysis and discriminant analysis to a large body of socio‐psychological data dealing with infant immunization. The researchers first apply factor analysis with orthogonal varimax rotation to the set of socio‐psychological variables in order to reduce their numbers without a significant loss of information.
Robert E. Markland, Douglas E. Durand
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Immune dysregulation by psychological distress (113.26)

The Journal of Immunology, 2011
Abstract The molecular basis for the immune dysfunction that accompanies psychological distress is unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine whether epigenetic modifications underlie this immune dysregulation. Women newly diagnosed with early stage breast cancer were enrolled into the study and psychological, immunological and ...
Herbert Mathews, Linda Janusek
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The Influence of Psychological Stress on the Immune Response to Vaccinesa

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1998
Abstract: We compared virus‐specific antibody and T‐cell responses to influenza virus vaccination in 32 caregivers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and matched control subjects. Caregivers showed a poorer antibody response and virus‐specific T‐cell response following vaccination compared to the control subjects as measured by fourfold increases in
R, Glaser   +3 more
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Psychological Immunity and Learning

Psychological Immunity and Learning Project,' a six-volume framework integrating psychiatry, neuroscience, and cultural determinants of health. This work defines 'Reward System Fatigue' (RSF), 'Learning Consciousness' (LC), and the 'Cognitive Immunity Gradient' (CIG)."
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Psychological Stress, Immunity, and the Effects on Indigenous Microflora

2010
Psychological stress is an intrinsic part of life that affects all organs of the body through direct nervous system innervation and the release of neuroendocrine hormones. The field of PsychoNeuroImmunology (PNI) has clearly demonstrated that the physiological response to psychological stressors can dramatically impact the functioning of the immune ...
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The Role of the Immune System in Psychology and Neuroscience

European Psychologist, 2002
The immune system and the nervous system are connected in a dynamic network that has important implications for psychology. First, if analyzed in functional terms, the immune system and the nervous system are not distinctly separated: The immune system can take part in neuronal signaling through the production of an array of transmitters and hormones ...
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Behavioral and psychological effects of immune activation

Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 1997
Infectious and many non-infectious diseases are associated with immune activation and the production of cytokines in the periphery and in the brain. Studies on experimental animals indicate that cytokines within the brain induce a depression-like behavioral syndrome, characterized by anhedonia, diminished interest in the environment, reduced libido ...
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