Chronic psychological stress dysregulates the immune system through sustained cortisol elevation, increasing susceptibility to infection, impairing vaccine responses, and accelerating biological aging by up to 10 years.
Chronic psychological stress suppresses immune function through sustained elevation of cortisol and catecholamines, which reduce natural killer cell activity, impair T cell proliferation, and decrease antibody responses to vaccines. Caregivers of dementia patients — a model of chronic stress — show telomere lengths equivalent to 10 additional years of biological aging compared to non-caregivers.
A meta-analysis by Segerstrom & Miller (2004) in Psychological Bulletin, pooling 293 studies, found that chronic stressors lasting more than one month consistently suppressed both cellular and humoral immunity. Cohen et al. (2012) in JAMA demonstrated that psychological stress was dose-dependently associated with susceptibility to the common cold — people with the highest stress scores were 2.9 times more likely to develop a cold. The landmark study by Epel et al. (2004) in PNAS found that women caring for chronically ill children had significantly shorter telomeres and lower telomerase activity than controls, with the most stressed caregivers showing telomere lengths equivalent to 9–17 additional years of biological aging.
"Chronic caregiving stress was associated with telomere lengths equivalent to 9–17 additional years of biological aging."
— Epel et al., PNAS 2004
MedlinePlus and the NIH identify chronic stress as a major contributor to physical health problems, including cardiovascular disease, immune dysfunction, and metabolic disorders. The NIH National Institute of Mental Health recommends stress management as a core component of preventive health, noting that relaxation techniques, mindfulness, and social support all have evidence for reducing the physiological effects of chronic stress. The NIA specifically notes the importance of managing stress for healthy cognitive ageing.
The most evidence-supported stress reduction interventions for immune health are mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), regular aerobic exercise, and social connection. MBSR has been shown in RCTs to reduce cortisol levels, increase natural killer cell activity, and improve vaccine responses. Exercise is uniquely effective because it both reduces cortisol and directly stimulates immune cell production. Social support buffers the immune effects of stress — people with strong social networks show smaller cortisol responses to stressors.
Vitaei verdict
Chronic stress is a well-evidenced accelerant of biological aging and immune dysfunction. Stress management is a legitimate medical intervention, not a lifestyle luxury.
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