Stress Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three stages of stress?

A

alarm stage= fight or flight
resistance stage= physiologic set points stabilize at a higher than normal level
exhaustion stage= resources run out

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2
Q

What are the two hormones that help us adapt or cope to & with stress?

A

adrenergic (NE & EPI) & cortisol

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3
Q

Where are our adrenergic hormones from? What are they good for physiologically? Cognitively?

A

sympathetic NS/adrenal medulla

physiologically: ANS & adrenalin keep us alert, increase physiological parameters
cognitively: NE causes shift from focused processing of sensory info to scanning the environment

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4
Q

Where is cortisol from? What is it good for physiologically? Cognitively?

A

hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis

physiologically: short and long term effects, permissive (restore E, helps w/memory, bolsters immune system) & suppressive (first line response, can lead to allergy or autoimmune disorder)
cognitively: adaptation to stress & restores homeostasis

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5
Q

What axis does NE & EPI come from? What about cortisol? What three structures make up the limbic system?

A

NE/EPI: sympathoadrenal axis
Cortisol: hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
limbic system: hippocampus, amygdala, limbic cortex

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6
Q

What systems lead to central changes in arousal, appraisal & cognition as well as peripheral physiological changes?

A

sympathoadrenal axis
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
limbic system

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7
Q

What regulates HPA axis? via what?

A

limbic system regulates HPA axis via PVN of hypothalamus

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8
Q

What does the sympathoadrenal axis come into play with the stress response? How does the limbic system tie into it?

A

generates short latency, initial part of stress response

limbic interprets negative stimuli and projects it to bed nucelus of stria terminalis (BNST)

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9
Q

What does the BNST do with the stressful/threatening info transmitted from the limbic system?

A

mediates the info from amygdala to hypothalamus

regulates locus coeruleus directly or via PVN of hypothalamus

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10
Q

What two structures of the brain module the response to the threat (in the sypathoadrenal axis)?

A

PFC & hippocampus

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11
Q

Where does the locus coeruleus project and what does each projection do?

A

caudally: activate subunits of sympathetic NS & release NE & EPI from adrenal medulla
rostrally: neuromodultes PFC, hippocampus, amygdala; also goes to LC, & provides feedback resetting of limbic control of ANS

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12
Q

In the sympathoadrenal axis, what two neurotransmitters cause system responses?

A

EPI & NE from adrenal medulla

EPI causes glucagon release (glucose) from the liver

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13
Q

What are sympathoadrenal axis central responses to acute stress determined by? What happens in a stressful vs non-stressful situation?

A

type of NE receptor activated by LC
non-stress: LC produces NE= engage high-affinity alpha2 receptors in PFC, hippo, amyg; NE strengthens PFC functions & weakens those of amyg & hippo
stress: responses from amyg increase LC activity; high NE engages lower affinity beta receptors= strengthen amyg & hippo fxn; higher NE shifts PFC from working memory to arousal; hippo & amyg enhanced memory & fear conditioning

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