Previous research has tied high levels of the stress hormone
cortisol in the blood, urine or saliva to obesity, but these
measurements can vary based on factors like the time of day and
don’t capture long-term stress levels, the study team notes in the
journal Obesity.
“When people are facing a stressful situation, a chain reaction is
set off in the body that results in the release of cortisol, leading
to higher levels of this hormone in the body,” said lead study
author Sarah Jackson of University College London.
“Cortisol is involved in a broad range of biological processes,
including metabolism, body composition and the accumulation of body
fat,” Jackson said by email. “When we’re stressed out we may also
find it more difficult to find the motivation to go for a run or
resist unhealthy foods.”
Stress sets off alarms in the brain that trigger the nervous system
to release hormones to sharpen the senses, tense the muscles, speed
up the pulse and deepen breathing. Commonly called a flight or
flight response, this biological reaction helps us defend ourselves
in threatening situations.
Isolated or temporary stressful situations may not be harmful, but
routine exposure to stress can lead to immune system problems, heart
disease, nervous system complications and mental health disorders in
addition to obesity.
For the study researchers examined data collected from men and women
aged 54 and older taking part in the English Longitudinal Study of
Ageing. Participants underwent tests every two years starting in
2002, and during the sixth wave of the study they provided a hair
clipping.
The study team tested cortisol levels that accumulated in the hair
over time in 2,527 men and women and found that participants with
more cortisol in their hair were also more likely to be obese or
have lots of excess fat around their midsection.
Researchers looked at cortisol levels in the two centimeters of hair
closest to the scalp, which typically represents about two months’
growth. They also looked at weight, waist circumference and body
mass index (BMI), a measure of weight relative to height.
Participants who were classified as obese based on their BMI or
waist circumference had particularly high levels of hair cortisol,
the study found. Analyzing weight and body fat data from assessments
in the four years prior to when the hair clipping was taken,
researchers also found that obesity tended to persist over time for
the people with the highest cortisol levels.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove how
stress directly impacts cortisol levels or weight gain.
[to top of second column] |
Other limitations include the primarily white, older adult study
population, which means results may be different with younger people
or other racial or ethnic groups, the authors note.
Even so, the findings add to growing evidence linking stress to
obesity, said Dr. Susan Fried, of the Icahn School of Medicine at
Mount Sinai in New York.
Cortisol is released in response to many stresses, Fried, who wasn’t
involved in the study, said by email. Chronically high cortisol is
thought to promote fat accumulation around the waist and increase
the ability of fat cells to store fat.
The fix for stressed out people looking to shed excess pounds isn’t
clear from the study results, however.
“I don’t think there is strong evidence or consistent studies
showing stress reduction itself causes weight loss,” Fried said.
“There is accumulating evidence that sleep is very important; people
overeat when under-rested.”
The findings do suggest that people may need to take a holistic
approach to weight loss that goes beyond diet and exercise to
consider factors like stress, said Dr. David Katz, director of the
Yale University Prevention Research Center in New Haven,
Connecticut.
“You might think you need to improve your diet, or exercise more,
and that’s true,” Katz, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by
email. “But for you, the first priority might be to manage stress
better so you are more capable of doing those things, and reduce a
hormonal barrier to weight control into the bargain.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2kX4fQk Obesity, online February 23, 2017.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|