If there's one work-horse
hormone in the body, it's cortisol.
Cortisol, which is secreted
by the adrenal gland, has a incredibly wide range of metabolic and
non-metabolic effects all over the body. Throughout the day, its release is
cyclic, like the thermostat in a house, rising and falling with our natural
Circadian rhythm of sleeping, wakefulness, and eating. However, with added
stress, the rhythm of cortisol is disrupted and we start seeing changes in our
sleep patterns, memory, immune response, and blood sugar levels.
When a stressful event, like
running to catch the bus, occurs, the hypothalamus releases corticotropin-releasing
hormone (CRH) that starts the stress response cascade causing release of adrenocorticotropic
hormone (ACTH) from the anterior pituitary gland. ACTH acts on the adrenal
gland, telling it to start pumping out more cortisol. That bus needs to be
caught so you can get to work on time! This hormonal response to an external
stressor, the approaching bus, takes only a few minutes to complete but, once
activated, cortisol levels stay elevated for up an hour, even if you're seated
safely on the bus with plenty of time to spare.
The persistence of cortisol
is a survival tactic, keeping the body primed and ready in case another
stressor presents itself. This is the normal stress response to occasional
stress, a quick rise in cortisol and then a gradual denouement.
If, however, if you get to
work and day after day is a crazy, non-stop day with no break for lunch let
alone coffee, the normal stress response turns into a chronic stress response
with a very different cortisol pattern. The chronically stressed individual
does not have a dramatic spike in cortisol levels in response to a momentary
stressor. Instead, there's a low-grade climb in cortisol over a prolonged time
period that never falls back down to normal levels.
What's happened? Adrenal
fatigue.
In a nutshell, after
maintaining elevated cortisol for so long, the adrenal glands can no longer cope
with an additional stress; they resist the signals from the brain and fail to
release more cortisol. Adrenal fatigue, or resistance, results in impairment of
the ability to deal with any type of stress.
The common cold or a minor
annoyance becomes overwhelming to a person with resistance adrenal glands. They
just can't cope and need to take serious time out to recharge their burnt out
body so that cortisol production can normalize.
So, what can be done to
counteract the damage done to the adrenal glands? First and foremost, find a
way to deal with stress. Tapping, yoga, simple stretches, specific breathing
techniques—these are all ways of reducing stress on the system. Secondly, get
rid of refined foods. Proper nutrition helps the body perform properly.
Need help with either of
those points? Contact me for a free 30-minute consultation. We will discuss
your main points of concern and, hopefully, you will go away with a tip or two
that will help you recover.
References
The Complete Doctor's
Stress Solution by Penny Kendall-Reed and Dr. Stephen Reed. Robert Rose,
2004. Chapter 1, pages 36 - 41
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