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Stress Vaccine: Stop Stress

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BOULDER, Colo. (Ivanhoe Newswire) — Seventy-eight percent of Americans say they feel stressed out at work. And when you’re stressed, your heart rate increases, and your blood pressure rises. If you suffer from chronic stress, you’re at higher risk for heart attacks, stroke, obesity, depression, and the list goes on and on. But now, there may be a solution. A stress vaccine that could take away your stress before it starts.

Police officers, airline pilots, firefighters, and the military. These are the four most stressed out workers.  There are pills to treat symptoms and therapy to talk through it.

Lisa Brenner, PhD, a Rehabilitation Psychologist at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus said, “Currently what we really work with is after the fact.”

But now, Brenner and neuro endocrinologist Christopher Lowry at CU Boulder are targeting stress before it starts.

(Read Full Interview)

Brenner said, “If we could do something to prevent over responsivity.”

Lowry’s team at the University of Colorado Boulder hasn’t discovered something new, but something old and abundant that could take away stress.

“Bacteria that are found in the soil that dust the mud, decaying vegetable, vegetable matter can confer this protective effect of preventing inappropriate inflammation,” said Lowry.

The bacteria found in dirt contain fatty acids that bind with receptors inside immune cells and lock out chemicals that cause inflammation. It’s a vicious cycle where inflammation triggers stress and the stress then triggers more inflammation. It’s based on the idea that as more and more people move away from farms, away from agriculture and getting their hands dirty, they’re moving away from things that build their immunity. In mice, this ‘stress vaccine’ prevented a PTSD- like syndrome in the short term and diminished stress reactions later on.

Lowry said, “This suggested that if you can immunize and prevent inappropriate inflammation, then you can prevent a lot of negative outcomes of future stressors.”

That means a vaccine, a pill, a nasal spray could actually stop stress, and everything that comes with it, before you feel stressed out!

The vaccine could also possibly help prevent other inflammatory diseases triggered by stress such as IBD and colitis. Professor Lowry says it could take up to ten years to get the stress vaccine to market. But simple exposure to any soil may have dramatic health benefits. Several studies suggest people who grow up on farms or in the country feel less stress, experience less depression, and are less likely to suffer from allergies and asthma.

Contributors to this news report include: Marsha Lewis, Field Producer; Rusty Reed, Videographer; Cyndy McGrath, Supervising Producer; Roque Correa, Editor.

To receive a free weekly e-mail on Medical Breakthroughs from Ivanhoe, sign up at: http://www.ivanhoe.com/ftk

MEDICAL BREAKTHROUGHS

RESEARCH SUMMARY

 

TOPIC:            STOP STRESS BEFORE YOU STRESS?

REPORT:       MB #4654

BACKGROUND: According to CBS News, the top ten most stressful jobs, in order, are: enlisted military personnel of three or four years, firefighters, airline pilots, police officers, broadcasters,

event coordinators, news reporters, public relations executives, senior corporate executives, and taxi drivers. This outcome was determined by evaluating eleven stress factors including travel required, industry growth potential and hazardous conditions. The top three least stressful jobs are listed as a diagnostic medical sonographer, a compliance officer, and a hair stylist.

(Source: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/10-most-and-least-stressful-jobs-in-america/)

SYMPTOMS: Stress can affect all aspects of your life, including your emotions, behaviors, thinking ability, and physical health. No part of the body is immune. Because people handle stress differently, symptoms of stress can vary. Symptoms can be vague and may be the same as those caused by medical conditions. Emotional symptoms may include agitation, low self-esteem, and depression. Physical symptoms may include headaches, loss of sexual desire, grinding teeth and low energy. And some cognitive symptoms might include disorganization, racing thoughts and constant worrying.

(Source: https://www.webmd.com/balance/stress-management/stress-symptoms-effects_of-stress-on-the-body#2)

NEW RESEARCH: Christopher Lowry, a Neuroendocrinologist at CU Boulder talks about the origin of the idea for stress immunization. “We’re working with a strain of soil-derived bacteria that was isolated in the early 1970s by John Stanford and his colleagues. He was an immunologist at UCL in London. They realized that vaccination programs against leprosy varied dramatically in their success based on geography. So there were some geographical areas where these vaccines worked really well. They went to one of those areas around Lake Kyogle, Uganda, anticipating that there might be some environmental factor that could explain why these vaccines were so successful there. And they discovered this strain of bacterium called mica bacterium vacy. And subsequently they learned that injections of this bacteria can modulate our immune system in a way that prevents inappropriate inflammation, in addition to its apparent effect acting as an adjuvant to boost the efficacy of the vaccines that were being used.”

(Source: Christopher Lowry)

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THIS REPORT, PLEASE CONTACT:

Lisa Marshall

303-492-3115

lisa.marshall@colorado.edu

If this story or any other Ivanhoe story has impacted your life or prompted you or someone you know to seek or change treatments, please let us know by contacting Marjorie Bekaert Thomas at mthomas@ivanhoe.com

Doctor Q and A

Read the entire Doctor Q&A for Christopher Lowry, a Neuroendocrinologist

Read the entire Q&A