Publication | Closed Access
Individual Differences in Cellular Immune Response to Stress
229
Citations
19
References
1991
Year
ImmunologyIndividual DifferencesHealthy Young AdultsSocial SciencesPsychologyInflammationStressCorrelational StudiesAcute Mental StressNeuroimmunologyPsychoneuroimmunologyAllergyPsychiatryStress HormoneCellular Stress ResponseAutoimmunityCardiovascular ReactivityImmune FunctionSocial StressCell StressAllostatic LoadMedicine
Correlational studies suggest that psychological stress suppresses cellular immune function in some, but not all, individuals. Here, effects of acute mental stress on lymphocyte subpopulations and T-lymphocyte mitogenesis were examined experimentally in healthy young adults. CD8 (T-suppressor/cytotoxic) lymphocytes increased in number and T-cell response to stimulation by phytohemagglutinin was attenuated following exposure to a 20-min laboratory stressor, but only in persons who also showed heightened catecholamine and cardiovascular reactions to stress. Hence, individuals differ substantially in their immunologic responsivity to behavioral stimuli, and such differences parallel (and may be predicted by) interindividual variability in stress-induced sympathetic nervous system activation.
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