Stress and Coping Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three general processes involved in stress?

A
  1. the stimulus/stressor
  2. the response (strain)
  3. the process (interaction between the two)
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2
Q

GIve a definition of stress.

A

a physical or emotional factor that causes bodily or mental tension and may lead to disease causation

a negative emotional experience accompanied by biochemical, physiological, cognitive, and behavioral changes that are directed toward altering the stressful event

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3
Q

What are the two general kinds of stress?

A

physical stress (cold, heat, infection, extended exercise)

psychological stress - an event that is PERCEIVED as negative (not directly physically threatening)

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4
Q

True or false; psychological stress is a top down process.

A

true

but once the stressor is seen as negative, it will cause the same physiological changes as a bottom-up physical stressor

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5
Q

What are the two main axes involve din the physiological resposne to stress?

A

1 the sympathetic-adrenal-medulla axis (SAM)

2. the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA)

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6
Q

In general, what wil the adrenal medulla release under stress in the SAM axis?

A

epiephrine and norepinephrine to increase BP and HR

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7
Q

Under stress, what will the hypothalamus realsase in the HPS axis?

A

corticotropin releasing hormone

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8
Q

What does that CRH do?

A

hits the anterior pituitary and causes release of adrenocorticotropic hormone

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9
Q

What does the ACTH do?

A

It goes tot he adrenal cortex and causes release of cortisol

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10
Q

How does cortisol work in stress?

A

It maintains the normal organic and metabolic functions of the sympathetic system. In generally it makes the system more effieicient under states of emergency

but it’s a bad idea for this to be working all the time!!

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11
Q

THe adrenal gland is involved in both axes. How?

A

the adrenal medulla secretes catecholamiens in the SAM

the adrenal cortex releases steroids in the HPA axis

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12
Q

What is the effect of cortisol on the immune system?

A

suppresses it in several ways

psychoneuroimmunology

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13
Q

What was Walter Cannon’s contribution to stress research?

A

came up with the idea of homeostasis

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14
Q

What is allostasis? How does it differ from homeostasis?

A

the compensation that an organism engages in to achieve homeostasis successfully

more focused on ACTIVE PROCESS to maintain homeostasis

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15
Q

Describe the fight or flight response

A

It’s the prototypical stress response

The fight-flight response incorporates powerful emotional (anxiety, fear, anger), neuroendocrine and autonomic changes to increase chance of survival.

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16
Q

What did Hans Selye contribute to the study of stress?

A

developed an idea of a General Adaptation Syndrome

especially significant because he includes the concept that CHRONIC stress is bad

17
Q

What are the three stages of general adaptation syndrome?

A
alartm reaction (detects the external stimulus)
Adaptation (engages in defensive countermeasure)
Exhaustion (body begins to run out of defenses int he face of long-term exposure)
18
Q

What is the limitation on Selye’s model?

A

Used animals, so didn’t take into account the psychological and social influences on stress

19
Q

What did RIchard Lazarus ontribute?

A

Gave a cognitive model for coping…

20
Q

What is coping?

A

the process of managing demands that are apprasied as taxing or exceeding the resources of the person

so it’s an internal effort to manage environmental demand

21
Q

What are the steps of Lazarus’ coping mdoel?

A
  1. environment event (test)
  2. Primary apprasial (what is this test? easy or hard? easy - no stress response, hard - stress response begins)
  3. If stress begins, secondary appraisal occurs (what resources can I use to cope with this test?)
  4. Coping behaviors
  5. Coping outcome (biological, psychological and behavioral responses(
22
Q

What is problem focused coping? Direct action?

A

In this example, studying for the exam

23
Q

What is emotion regulation coping?

A

deep breathing in between studying, drink a cup of tea, etc

relaxation to maintain focus in the long run

24
Q

Describe Type A behavior

A
time urgency
impatience
competitiveness
hard on themselves
hostility

may not cope well with stress

25
Q

What is the type A hostility a particular risk for?

A

coronary heart disease

26
Q

IF a person learns they don’t have control over a stressful situation, can their performance improve when given coping skills?

A

typically not

27
Q

How has chronic activation of the HPA system been shown to affect cardiovascular health?

A

chronic HPA activity is associated with the developent of cardiovascular disease - the cortisol in compinantion of cholesterol leads to increased atherosclerosis

28
Q

WHat is the relationship between depression and MI?

A

people who have depression are more likely to have an MI than those that don’t have depression

29
Q

How can stress INDIRECTLY affect health?

A

by contributing to unhealthy behaviors like smoking, drinking, poor diet, and sedentary lifestyle

become problematic if they become long-term coping strategies because they don’t actually help with the stress! smoking doesn’t reduce stress levels! From physiology it actually increases stress because it increases cortisol release!

30
Q

How does stress affect care seeking/

A

increases care seeking for minor symptoms, but may decrease care seeking for serious ones