[♩ INTRO ] Stress happens. And that’s not always bad—starting a new
job or getting married can both be happy things, but they also can be really stressful. There are some kinds of stress that just don’t
seem to go away, though. Like the feeling that you’re drowning in
work, but still perpetually worried about making ends meet. If you deal with a lot of stress every day,
for months or years on end, then stress doesn’t just feel awful—it actually causes you physical
harm. Psychologists call any event or situation
that puts pressure on you or threatens your well-being a stressor, while stress refers
to your psychological and physical reactions. Stressors that are one and done—like locking
your keys in your car, or forgetting your wallet—bring on acute stress. But when stressors are repeated or continuous,
that’s chronic stress.
Things like abusive relationships, living
in poverty, and being discriminated against have all been shown to cause chronic stress. And that psychological anguish takes a toll
physically. When you experience acute stress, your body
activates a system called the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis, or just HPA axis because why would you
want to say all that other stuff over and over again. It starts deep in your brain, in the limbic
system — the part responsible for a lot of your automatic emotional reactions, among
other things. There, a region called the hypothalamus releases
hormones that start a whole chain of more hormones being released — first by your
pituitary gland, and then by your adrenal glands, which release a bunch of adrenaline
and cortisol into your bloodstream. And those two hormones trigger the “fight-or-flight”
response. They boost physical activity by increasing
your blood sugar and the blood flow to your muscles, and bump up your metabolism at the
same time.
The idea is that the physical boost helps
you fight the stressor or run away. So, like, if you were suddenly face to face
with a bear, the surge in energy would help you either outrun it, or go all like Revenant
on it. The same system is activated by chronic stress,
but things get a bit more complicated. Researchers have found that people under some
kinds of chronic stress have perpetually high cortisol levels, as if their HPA axis is running
constantly. For others, it can depend on the timing, with
higher cortisol levels near the start of the stress before it actually dips lower than
usual.
But we do know that while this stress reaction
can be helpful at times, having it running all the time is a problem. People under chronic stress are at higher
risk for all kinds of ailments, like heart disease, autoimmune diseases, and mental disorders
like anxiety and depression. That’s because, in addition to it being
super unpleasant to be stressed out all the time, the stress response is constantly sapping
your energy. The resources used by fight-or-flight have
to come from somewhere, and one of the places they come from is your immune system.
On the molecular level, the same cortisol
that works to get extra glucose to your muscles also stops your body from making as many infection-fighting
white blood cells as it normally would. So stress can tank your ability to fight infections. It's kind of like evolution is telling your
body not to worry about fighting off that cold right now, because you need to fight
that bear that is right in front of you. Except with chronic stress, the bear isn’t
a bear. It’s your crappy job. Or your unhappy relationship. Or whatever it is that stresses you out all
the time. And that means your immune system never gets
the chance to recover and deal with that cold as easily as it normally would. One famous experiment demonstrating this involved
11 dental students who volunteered to have their mouths biopsied twice: first during
summer vacation, and then again during exam week.
It took an average of 3 days longer for the
wounds to heal while they were stressed about exams. All kinds of other studies have gotten similar
results — some by punching small holes in people like they did with the dental students,
and others by observing how stress affects recovery from surgery and other major wounds. There's also research suggesting that chronic
stress explains part of the relationship between poverty and health.
Even just the perception of being in a lower
socioeconomic class is associated with an increase in respiratory infections. Stress can also advance the aging process. By the time you get older, your DNA has had
to replicate so many times that the protective parts at each of the ends of the chromosome,
called telomeres, can kind of start to fray. When telomeres are shorter, it's more likely
that there will be errors in copying genes. And those errors increase your risk of disease. There’s evidence that having more cortisol
in your blood interrupts the repair of telomeres. Which might explain why stress is linked to
diseases that are also associated with age, like heart disease, cancer, and anemia.
To stay healthy, the best thing you can do
is get rid of the chronic stress. But, easier said than done. If you can’t get rid of it completely, things
like meditation and relaxation therapies can help lower your stress response. And, weirdly enough, so might changing how
you think about stress. Studies have shown that when people think
about the source of stress as a challenge to overcome instead of a threat to their well-being,
that seems to lower their perceived stress and reduce their body’s physical response. There’s another way you might be able to
improve your health, too: help others reduce their stress. In a sample of over 800 older adults, those
with high stress who also reported helping friends or neighbors with things like housework
or childcare had mortality rates similar to those with low stress. Whereas those with high stress who didn’t
help out had reduced odds of survival. So, chronic stress is not good for anyone. But even if you can’t avoid being stressed
out all the time, there are ways to help yourself relax — and sometimes you can even reduce
other people’s stress in the process.
Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow
Psych! If you want to keep up to date with our latest
videos explaining how these big ole noggins of ours work, head over to youtube.com/scishowpsych
and click on that subscribe button because it’ll all come into your subscription box
and you’ll watch every single one of them and it really helps… with the YouTube algorithm. Thank you! [♩ OUTRO ].
Tag: Hank
Why Do Depression and Anxiety Go Together?
Even though depression and anxiety are different types of disorders, they tend to go together. But why can it happen?Resources:
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255
Crisis Text Line: https://www.crisistextline.org/
International Resources: https://yourlifecounts.org/find-help/Hosted by: Brit Garner
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Sources:
https://www.nature.com/articles/srep40511
https://tourette.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/DSM-5_Depressive_Disorders.pdf
https://images.pearsonclinical.com/images/assets/basc-3/basc3resources/DSM5_DiagnosticCriteria_GeneralizedAnxietyDisorder.pdf
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/evolution-the-self/201005/anxiety-and-depression-first-cousins-least-part-2-5
https://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletter_article/generalized-anxiety-disorder
https://www.nami.org/Blogs/NAMI-Blog/January-2018/The-Comorbidity-of-Anxiety-and-Depression
https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/understanding-the-stress-response
Can We Distinguish Anxiety From Depression?https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4957550/ http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/anxiety/understanding-comorbid-depression-and-anxiety https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0191886905001509 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13651500410005513 https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/3ec5/69ba6c3f377d94a9fc79e6656d27d099430c.pdf http://psycnet.apa.org/record/1990-98158-028 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3860380/ https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1471489201001175 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3666571/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9854171 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC181180/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5313380/ https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Giovanni_Castellini/publication/225062068_The_Role_of_Life_Events_and_HPA_Axis_in_Anxiety_Disorders_a_Review/links/569b457008aeeea985a13e2e/The-Role-of-Life-Events-and-HPA-Axis-in-Anxiety-Disorders-a-Review.pdf https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00199/full https://europepmc.org/abstract/med/2198299 http://psycnet.apa.org/record/1998-10130-001 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0165614704003104 serotonin receptors: https://www.cell.com/neuron/fulltext/S0896-6273(09)00980-5 norepinephrine: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/da.20642 https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/ben/cnsamc/2010/00000010/00000003/art00002 http://psycnet.apa.org/record/1998-10328-001Image Sources: https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/how-will-i-know-if-im-right-gm987567772-267815140 https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/business-woman-is-depressed-she-felt-stressed-and-alone-in-the-house-gm947804676-258783178 https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/thoughtful-stressed-man-with-a-mess-in-his-head-gm920000698-252878636 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serotonin#/media/File:Serotonin-Spartan-HF-based-on-xtal-3D-balls-web.png https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Noradrenaline_3D_ball.png https://www.istockphoto.com/vector/brain-vector-illustration-in-top-view-gm1027464288-275475407
Why Do Depression and Anxiety Go Together?
[♪ INTRO ] If you’ve ever experienced anxiety and depression
— in the clinical sense, I mean — you’ll know that they can feel really different. With anxiety, you’re all ramped up. And with depression, you’re very, very down. Yet they tend to go together. And a lot of medications, especially certain
types of antidepressants, can be used to treat both. We still don’t know a ton about how exactly
anxiety and depression work in the brain — or how antidepressants work to treat them. But over time, psychologists have come to
realize that the two types of conditions are surprisingly similar. They may feel very different in the moment. But they actually have a lot of symptoms in
common, and involve some very similar thought patterns. They might even have similar brain chemistries. So if you’re looking to understand a little
more about how anxiety and depression manifest themselves — whether for yourself or for
someone else in your life — those connections are a good place to start.
Depression and anxiety aren’t really specific disorders — they’re generic terms for types of disorders. But the most common, and most closely linked, are major depressive disorder, or MDD, and generalized anxiety disorder, or GAD. In any given year in the U.S., where it’s easiest to find detailed statistics, about 7% of the population will have MDD, and about 3% will have GAD. Lots of those people have both: About 2/3 of people with major depression also have some kind of anxiety disorder, and about 2/3 of people with generalized anxiety disorder also have major depression. And whether you have one or the other or both, the same medications are often at the top of the list to help treat it — usually antidepressants. Unsurprisingly, psychologists have noticed these statistics. But for a long time, we’ve thought of generalized anxiety and major depression as very different things, and understandably so. Probably the most noticeable symptom of anxiety is arousal, which in psychology is a technical term rather than a specifically sexual thing. It basically just means being on high alert — whether psychologically, with increased awareness, or physically, with things like a racing heart and sweaty palms.
Arousal isn’t part of major depression, though. And there’s a key symptom of MDD that doesn’t usually show up in generalized anxiety: low positive affect, which is the technical term for not getting much pleasure out of life and feeling lethargic and just kind of … blah. So there are important differences between anxiety and depression, which is part of why they’re still considered separate classes of disorders. But when you look at the other symptoms, you start to realize that major depression and generalized anxiety have almost everything else in common. There’s restlessness, fatigue, irritability, problems with concentration, sleep disturbances … the list goes on.
And that’s just in the official diagnostic criteria. So for decades, psychologists have been examining the models they use to describe anxiety and depression in the brain to see if they point to a similar source for both types of disorders. They’ve come up with lots of different ideas, as researchers do, but the most common ones tend to center around the fight or flight response to stress. Fight or flight kicks in when you’re confronted with something your mind sees as a threat, and it automatically prepares you to either fight or run away. And when you think about it, anxiety and depression are just different types of flight. Psychologists often characterize anxiety as a sense of helplessness, at its core, and depression as a sense of hopelessness. Anxiety might feel like you’re looking for ways to fight back. But part of what makes it a disorder is that it’s not a short-lived feeling that’s easily resolved once you have a plan.
Of course, as with all things mental health, anxiety disorders can be deeply personal and won’t feel the same for everybody. But clinical anxiety does tend to be more pervasive. The worry sticks around and starts to take over your life because it doesn’t feel like something you can conquer. So anxiety and depression might just be slightly different ways of expressing the same flight response: helplessness or hopelessness. And maybe that’s part of why they so often go together. That connection also shows up on the biochemical side of the stress response. There are a lot of hormones involved in this response, and their effects interact in super complex ways that scientists still don’t fully understand.
But both depressive and anxiety disorders are closely associated with an oversensitive stress response system. Researchers think that’s one reason both of these types of disorders are so much more common in people who’ve experienced major stresses like trauma or childhood abuse. Those stressors could make their stress response system more sensitive. The main hormones involved aren’t always the same, but the changes can cause some of the same symptoms — problems with sleep, for example. So anxiety and depression seem to be two sides of a similar reaction to stress, in terms of both thought processes and hormones. Still, that doesn’t really explain why some antidepressants can treat both anxiety and depression. Because those medications primarily affect neurotransmitters, the molecules your brain cells use to send messages to each other. If you thought we had a lot left to learn about how the stress response works, we know even less about what the brain chemistry of anxiety and depression looks like, or how antidepressants help. But if the thought processes and physical responses that go along with these disorders aren’t quite as different as they seem on the surface, it makes sense that the brain chemistry would be similar, too.
And that’s exactly what scientists have found. More specifically, lots of studies have pointed to lower levels of the neurotransmitter known as serotonin as a major factor in both anxiety and depression. Researchers have even identified some more specific cellular receptors that seem to be involved in both. There’s also some evidence that the way the brain handles another neurotransmitter, norepinephrine, can be similar in both anxiety and depression. Since most antidepressants work by increasing serotonin levels, and some of them also affect norepinephrine, that could explain why they’re so helpful for both anxiety and depression. Although again, there’s a lot we don’t know about their exact mechanisms. Ultimately, there’s no denying that in the moment, anxiety and depression can seem like very different feelings. And if someone has both types of disorders — well, it’s easy to see how that could feel overwhelming. Like, it’s hard enough treating generalized anxiety or major depression on their own.
And it’s true that it is often harder to treat these conditions when someone has both. But maybe not twice as hard. After all, anxiety and depressive disorders have a lot in common, from their symptoms to the basic brain chemistry behind them to some of the treatments that can help. The fact that they often go together can be really tough. But understanding more about why that is has also pointed us toward better treatments and more effective therapies, that really can help. Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Psych. If you're looking for someone to talk to about your mental health, we left a few resources in this video’s description. And if you'd like to learn more general info about treatments, you can watch our episode on misconceptions about antidepressants. [♪ OUTRO ].
Depression and anxiety aren’t really specific disorders — they’re generic terms for types of disorders. But the most common, and most closely linked, are major depressive disorder, or MDD, and generalized anxiety disorder, or GAD. In any given year in the U.S., where it’s easiest to find detailed statistics, about 7% of the population will have MDD, and about 3% will have GAD. Lots of those people have both: About 2/3 of people with major depression also have some kind of anxiety disorder, and about 2/3 of people with generalized anxiety disorder also have major depression. And whether you have one or the other or both, the same medications are often at the top of the list to help treat it — usually antidepressants. Unsurprisingly, psychologists have noticed these statistics. But for a long time, we’ve thought of generalized anxiety and major depression as very different things, and understandably so. Probably the most noticeable symptom of anxiety is arousal, which in psychology is a technical term rather than a specifically sexual thing. It basically just means being on high alert — whether psychologically, with increased awareness, or physically, with things like a racing heart and sweaty palms.
Arousal isn’t part of major depression, though. And there’s a key symptom of MDD that doesn’t usually show up in generalized anxiety: low positive affect, which is the technical term for not getting much pleasure out of life and feeling lethargic and just kind of … blah. So there are important differences between anxiety and depression, which is part of why they’re still considered separate classes of disorders. But when you look at the other symptoms, you start to realize that major depression and generalized anxiety have almost everything else in common. There’s restlessness, fatigue, irritability, problems with concentration, sleep disturbances … the list goes on.
And that’s just in the official diagnostic criteria. So for decades, psychologists have been examining the models they use to describe anxiety and depression in the brain to see if they point to a similar source for both types of disorders. They’ve come up with lots of different ideas, as researchers do, but the most common ones tend to center around the fight or flight response to stress. Fight or flight kicks in when you’re confronted with something your mind sees as a threat, and it automatically prepares you to either fight or run away. And when you think about it, anxiety and depression are just different types of flight. Psychologists often characterize anxiety as a sense of helplessness, at its core, and depression as a sense of hopelessness. Anxiety might feel like you’re looking for ways to fight back. But part of what makes it a disorder is that it’s not a short-lived feeling that’s easily resolved once you have a plan.
Of course, as with all things mental health, anxiety disorders can be deeply personal and won’t feel the same for everybody. But clinical anxiety does tend to be more pervasive. The worry sticks around and starts to take over your life because it doesn’t feel like something you can conquer. So anxiety and depression might just be slightly different ways of expressing the same flight response: helplessness or hopelessness. And maybe that’s part of why they so often go together. That connection also shows up on the biochemical side of the stress response. There are a lot of hormones involved in this response, and their effects interact in super complex ways that scientists still don’t fully understand.
But both depressive and anxiety disorders are closely associated with an oversensitive stress response system. Researchers think that’s one reason both of these types of disorders are so much more common in people who’ve experienced major stresses like trauma or childhood abuse. Those stressors could make their stress response system more sensitive. The main hormones involved aren’t always the same, but the changes can cause some of the same symptoms — problems with sleep, for example. So anxiety and depression seem to be two sides of a similar reaction to stress, in terms of both thought processes and hormones. Still, that doesn’t really explain why some antidepressants can treat both anxiety and depression. Because those medications primarily affect neurotransmitters, the molecules your brain cells use to send messages to each other. If you thought we had a lot left to learn about how the stress response works, we know even less about what the brain chemistry of anxiety and depression looks like, or how antidepressants help. But if the thought processes and physical responses that go along with these disorders aren’t quite as different as they seem on the surface, it makes sense that the brain chemistry would be similar, too.
And that’s exactly what scientists have found. More specifically, lots of studies have pointed to lower levels of the neurotransmitter known as serotonin as a major factor in both anxiety and depression. Researchers have even identified some more specific cellular receptors that seem to be involved in both. There’s also some evidence that the way the brain handles another neurotransmitter, norepinephrine, can be similar in both anxiety and depression. Since most antidepressants work by increasing serotonin levels, and some of them also affect norepinephrine, that could explain why they’re so helpful for both anxiety and depression. Although again, there’s a lot we don’t know about their exact mechanisms. Ultimately, there’s no denying that in the moment, anxiety and depression can seem like very different feelings. And if someone has both types of disorders — well, it’s easy to see how that could feel overwhelming. Like, it’s hard enough treating generalized anxiety or major depression on their own.
And it’s true that it is often harder to treat these conditions when someone has both. But maybe not twice as hard. After all, anxiety and depressive disorders have a lot in common, from their symptoms to the basic brain chemistry behind them to some of the treatments that can help. The fact that they often go together can be really tough. But understanding more about why that is has also pointed us toward better treatments and more effective therapies, that really can help. Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Psych. If you're looking for someone to talk to about your mental health, we left a few resources in this video’s description. And if you'd like to learn more general info about treatments, you can watch our episode on misconceptions about antidepressants. [♪ OUTRO ].
Will Stress Really Make You Go Gray?
Just like the myth that plucking one gray hair will make three sprout, stress making your hair white isn’t actually a thing. Or is it?!Hosted by: Olivia GordonHead to https://scishowfinds.com/ for hand selected artifacts of the universe!
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Sources:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/why-does-hair-turn-gray/#
https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/hair-turn-gray-2017091812226
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21466661
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11162910/
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/fact-or-fiction-stress-causes-gray-hair/
http://www.aocd.org/?page=TelogenEffluviumHA
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Christiane_Liezmann/publication/7060213_Towards_a_free_radical_theory_of_graying_melanocyte_apoptosis_in_the_aging_human_hair_follicle_is_an_indicator_of_oxidative_stress_induced_tissue_damage/links/00b49525797be5bdf3000000.pdf
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3614697/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3673399/
How Chronic Stress Harms Your Body
We can’t avoid having stress, and that’s not always a bad thing. But if you are dealing with a lot of stress every day, it might cause you physical harm.Hosted by: Hank Green
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Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishow
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Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters:
Kelly Landrum Jones, Sam Lutfi, Kevin Knupp, Nicholas Smith, Inerri, D.A. Noe, alexander wadsworth, سلطان الخليفي, Piya Shedden, KatieMarie Magnone, Scott Satovsky Jr, Bella Nash, Charles Southerland, Bader AlGhamdi, James Harshaw, Patrick Merrithew, Patrick D. Ashmore, Candy, Tim Curwick, charles george, Saul, Mark Terrio-Cameron, Viraansh Bhanushali, Kevin Bealer, Philippe von Bergen, Chris Peters, Justin Lentz
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