Audio-Digest Foundation: obstetrics-gynecology

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Audio-Digest FoundationObstetrics/Gynecology


Volume 53, Issue 14
July 21, 2006

The following is an abstracted summary, not a verbatim transcript, of the lectures/discussions on this audio program. If, after reviewing this written summary, you would like to hear the contents and/or earn CME/CE credit:

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DAMAGE CONTROL

STRESS AND ITS IMPACT ON THE HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF WOMEN Esther Sternberg, MD, Research Professor, American University, Washington DC; Director, Integrative Neural Immune Program; Chief and Senior Investigator, Section on Neuroendocrine Immunology and Behavior, National Institute of Mental Health/National Institutes of Health, Rockville, MD
Introduction: science returning to ancient teachings that emotions and health are one; stress can promote sickness, and changing stressful responses can restore health; study of molecules, hormones, and nerve pathways shows many ways in which brain and immune system communicate; way in which central nervous system (CNS) regulates immune system and changes immune system function, and connections in immune system important in maintaining health
Brain’s stress response: nerves, molecules, and hormones involved; hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis—corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH; stress hormone) released from hypothalamus and stimulates pituitary gland to release adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) which in turn causes adrenal glands to release glucocorticoids (steroids); immune system regulated by sympathetic nervous system (SNS), peripheral nervous system, and vagus nerve; immune molecules—immune system sends signals to CNS via cytokines (immune molecules present during inflammation) that change how immune system functions; inflammation, immune signaling, and immune molecules play important role in nerve cell death, survival, and repair; cytokines—act like hormones; made at site (immune system) distal to organ affected (brain); affect brain function and activate stress response and sickness behavior (behavior brought on by brain, but triggered by immune molecules); immune disease results when neuroendocrine stress response out of balance
Stress: Hans Selye first physician and scientist to recognize theory of stress; defined it as body’s nonspecific response to any demand; different kinds of stress (eg, psychologic, physical, physiologic) can occur at same time; once brain receives incoming signals through perceptual centers, they feed into final common pathway of stress response
Components of stress response: hormonal stress response—produced by CRH; CRH stimulates pituitary gland to secrete ACTH and adrenal glands to secrete glucocorticoids; neuronal stress response—adrenergic nervous system activated; adrenaline released from adrenal glands and adrenaline-like chemicals (norepinephrine) released from adrenergic nerve endings; hormonal and neuronal stress response coordinate into fight-or-flight response; stress response essential— provides energy to perform and focus attention (especially needed in dangerous situations); some stress good for person; optimal level essential for person to perform; animal studies show correlation between nerve firings; low nerve firing in part of brain (locus caeruleus) regulating sympathetic part of stress response if animal inattentive and drowsy; repeated firings of nerve cells cause stress center of brain to “freeze up”
Handling stress: whether person feels stressed or stimulated depends on ratio of demand to control experienced; controlling stress response achieved by fooling brain into thinking it is in high-demand, high- control situation, as opposed to low-control situation; complete control of any situation not practical; stress response reduced if person can learn to feel in control or actually take control of certain aspects of situation; training and practice important; biofeedback, stress reduction programs, meditation, yoga, prayer, exercise, social support, Mediterranean lifestyle, and psychotherapy useful stress management tools; allow person to disconnect emotional response from initiating event; no single modality works for all people or for individual throughout life
Stress and sickness: stressors have different effects, depending upon dose, pattern, duration, and person’s sex; allostatic load—cumulative effect of all stressful events on body; unlikely that single stressful event or multiple stressful events with time to recuperate cause sickness; activation of brain’s hormonal stress response (CRH, ACTH, and glucocorticoids) way to shut off immune response; glucocorticoids among most potent anti-inflammatory drugs produced in body; stress causes sickness through activation of brain hormones and nerve pathways that ultimately affect receptors on immune cells that change how immune cells function; disease results when neuroendocrine stress response out of balance; illnesses associated with blunted hormonal stress response include rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjögren’s syndrome, dermatitis, asthma, fibromyalgia, and chronic fatigue syndrome; interruption of HPA axis can also occur at tissue level through impaired sensitivity to effects of glucocorticoids (known as glucocorticoid resistance); hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis plays important role in regulating autoimmune inflammatory disease and immune system
Female sex hormones: estrogens proinflammatory; low concentration of estrogens stimulates cellular component of immune response and high concentration stimulates anti-inflammatory cytokines; communication occurs between stress hormone axis and sex hormone axis and they regulate one another; no single hormone plays role in regulating how person responds to stress or how stress response affects immune response
Autoimmune inflammatory disease: greater incidence in women than men (2:1 to 10:1); no question female sex hormones play important role in manifestation of illnesses; multigenic and polygenic; many illnesses have small genetic component; whether person develops disease depends on genetic load; genetic contribution of traits accounts for 35%, environmental factors for 65%; complementary and alternative modalities directed at changing environmental milieu that predisposes or protects person from inherited diseases
Conclusion: genetic and developmental factors and environmental exposures determine set point of host response in hormonal stress response; all contribute to regulating immune system; understanding how hormonal stress response affects health can assist health care provider in preventing and treating disease and assist patient in using complementary and alternative modalities together with modern advances of medical science; stress normal part of life; people should seek care if stress impairs functioning; person should not be expected to handle stress alone or allowed to accept situation as their biology (may need medication or guidance from health care provider)
HOW TO SPOT DOMESTIC ABUSE BEFORE IT SPIRALS OUT OF CONTROL Jeanne King, PhD, Psychologist, Author, Speaker and Consulting Expert on Family Violence Intervention, Denver, CO
Myths about domestic abuse: occurs primarily in lower socioeconomic population; abuser can change; victim responsible to help abuser change
Risks inherent in leaving battering relationships: on way out of abusive relationship, victim likely to be revictimized by perpetrator’s use of legal system to continue to batter and regain control of family; battered women more vulnerable to physical attack, attack on personal privacy, civil liberties, and parental rights after leaving abuser; 75% of all homicides by intimate male partners occur after victim leaves abuser; domestic abuse fundamentally about control; violence manifestation of domestic abuse
Pregnant women: account for 25% of victims of domestic abuse; 40% of all assaults on women by domestic partner occur during first pregnancy; estimated that pregnant women have twice risk for battery
Family court: often facilitates continuation of battering dynamic; if perpetrator controls family finances (most often case), litigation can be controlled through, eg, legal stalking, financial starve-out tactics, threats of obtaining custody of children; perpetrators often use threat of obtaining custody of children to obtain what they want
Role of health care provider: do not assume family court provides victim with protection from perpetrator of domestic abuse; support victim and make appropriate referral to domestic violence agency or advocate; protocol in office for handling victims of domestic violence and familiarity with protocol in hospital recommended; never assume one health care provider will do job of another
Encourage victim to take control: belief that victim responsible for and can control violence is myth; victim enables violence, but does not control it; help victim utilize internal resources in conjunction with social resources to protect self when leaving abusive relationship; encourage victim to take responsibility for own life and relinquish responsibility for perpetrator’s actions; victim lives in perpetual state of fear, often manifesting in health problems, ie, irritable bowel syndrome, chronic pelvic pain, insomnia, headaches, anxiety, depression; best point of intervention is early prevention
Signs and signals: 1 of 3 people experience domestic abuse at some point in life; red flags—bruises; partner accompanies patient to every visit and does not leave room; partner answers questions for patient; patient appears depressed; complaint of pelvic pain; children accompanying patient appear fearful
Victim: feels oppressed, controlled, manipulated, and caged; feeling as though walking on eggshells common; male victims—often described as “henpecked”; same dynamic of excessive jealousy, possessiveness, hypersensitivity, unrealistic expectations, and mood shifts (“Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde” personality)
Abuser: externalizes blame; blames victim for her (or his) problems, circumstances, feelings, and thoughts; lives on side of righteousness; blames victim for altercations perpetrated on victim (major red flag); dynamics and symptoms same whether abuse physical, emotional, psychologic, or sexual; control and possessiveness primary characteristics; victim consents to being controlled, whether consciously or unconsciously; abuser nonempathic to victim’s feelings; behaves as though world revolves around him (or her), expecting victim to cater to needs; child abuse—70% of intimate partner abusers abuse their children; intimate partner violence important predictor for child abuse; battering—can be physical, emotional, or psychologic; used to establish and maintain dynamic of unequal power within relationship; although important symptom, only one facet in larger picture
Isolation: victim often isolated from all sources of support, eg, social, emotional, financial; creates relationship of dominance, dependency, and exclusivity; isolation social mechanism that maintains domestic violence, and denial psychologic mechanism that maintains it; speaker opines health care providers serve as important frontline resource for domestic violence intervention

Educational Objectives

The goal of this program is to educate the listener about the connections between emotions and health and the role of health care providers in identifying and supporting victims of domestic violence. After hearing and assimilating this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. Summarize how nerves, molecules, and hormones connect the brain and immune system.
2. List the 2 components of the stress response.
3. Discuss how the brain signals the immune system and how stress contributes to chronic disease.
4. Explain how a victim of domestic violence can continue to be victimized after leaving the perpetrator of abuse.
5. Recognize the dynamics underlying domestic violence and the role of health care providers in assisting victims of domestic violence.

Suggested Reading

Elliott L et al: Barriers to screening for domestic violence. J Gen Intern Med 27(2):112, 2002; Eskandari F et al: Neural-immune interactions in health and disease. Ann N Y Acad Sci, 966:20, 2002; Marks JS et al: Does a failure to count mean that it fails to count? Addressing intimate partner violence. Am J Prev Med 30(6):530, 2006; Marques-Deak A et al: Brain-immune interactions and disease susceptibility. Mol Psychiatry 10(3):239, 2005; Sternberg EM: Neuroendocrine regulation of autoimmune/inflammatory disease. J Endocrinol 169(3):423, 2001.

Faculty Disclosure

In adherence to ACCME guidelines, the Audio-Digest Foundation requests all lecturers to disclose any significant financial relationship with the manufacturer or provider of any commercial product or service discussed. For this issue, the faculty reported nothing to disclose.


Dr. Sternberg was recorded at Pain Management in Women Over the Lifecycle sponsored by the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine and held April 27-29, 2006, in San Diego, CA. Dr. King was recorded at the 24th Annual OB/GYN Update sponsored by HealthPartners Institute for Medical Education, held April 20-21, 2006, in Minneapolis, MN. The Audio-Digest Foundation thanks the speakers and the sponsors for their cooperation in the production of this program.


Reproduction of this summary in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

If, after reviewing this written summary, you would like to hear the contents and/or earn CME/CE credit:

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