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The Physiology of Stress

2019
All humans feel stress. In response to emotional or physical stress, the human body induces a complicated physiologic response that is known and yet still incompletely understood. The biology of stress is discussed using the terms allostasis (the normal stress response and the reason that stress exists), allostatic load (when the stress response ...
Dana Zappetti, Josephine Cool
openaire   +2 more sources

Stress in Physiological Studies

Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology, 2011
The review focuses on the concept of biological stress pioneered by Hans Selye, who demonstrated a key involvement of the pituitary-adrenocortical axis in the response to stress. It discusses the historic background of development of the stress concept and some aspects of modern physiological researches related to stress-induced activation of the ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Environmental stress physiology

2004
Microalgae represent a unique experimental system to study stress responses of photosynthetic organisms. In higher plants, response and adaptation to stress takes place in two levels: The metabolic level and the morphological/structural level. In many cases it is difficult, if not impossible, to determine which is the initial response and which one is ...
Avigad Vonshak, Giuseppe Torzillo
openaire   +4 more sources

Nursing stress and patient care: real-time investigation of the effect of nursing tasks and demands on psychological stress, physiological stress, and job performance: study protocol.

Journal of Advanced Nursing, 2013
AIM To examine the effects of nursing tasks (including their physiological and psychological demands, and the moderating effects of reward and control) on distress and job performance in real time.
B. Farquharson   +8 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Glucocorticoid Physiology, Pharmacology and Stress [PDF]

open access: possible, 1986
Basal levels of glucocorticoids maintained by negative feedback regulation are known to modulate a wide range of physiological processes, through a variety of effects such as those on carbohydrate metabolism and "permissive" actions on effects of other hormones.
Allan Munck, Paul M. Guyre
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The physiology of stress and stress recovery

2018
Stress (i.e. the state of threatened homeostasis), is normally associated with adaptive physical and behavioural changes that promote individual survival. Successful maintenance of homeostasis leads to the state of eustasis, which represents health. The prolonged, excessive, or deficient response of the stress system to stress, however, may lead to a ...
Peter Währborg   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Physiology of Stress: A Behavioral View

1987
Stress is viewed as a general biological and usually functional response to environmental and bodily demands. This paper summarises recent findings on interactions between environment, individual behavioral and physiological characteristics and the properties of stressors, stress states (responses) and organ systems in determining health or disease.
Dirk S. Fokkema   +5 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Metabolomics in Plant Stress Physiology

2018
Metabolomics is an essential technology for functional genomics and systems biology. It plays a key role in functional annotation of genes and understanding towards cellular and molecular, biotic and abiotic stress responses. Different analytical techniques are used to extend the coverage of a full metabolome.
Wolfram Weckwerth   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Physiological Responses to Abiotic Stresses

2016
Olive (Olea europaea L.) trees are widespread in Mediterranean agroecosystems and are now extensively cultivated in different warm-temperate regions of the world such as North and South America, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, and even in the monsoon systems of China and India. In the Mediterranean area, the biological and agronomical success
Sebastiani Luca   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Stress Physiology and Physiometrics

2020
Psychological stressors, including acute stressors such as public speaking, short-term stressors such as exam periods, and long-term stressors such as caregiving have all been associated with changes in physiological systems. Much of the literature relating psychological stress and physiology has ignored how physiometrics—the reliability and validity ...
Gregory T. Smith   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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