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Physiological responding to stress in middle-aged males enriched for longevity: a social stress study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Individuals from families with a history of longevity exhibit lower rates of age-related diseases like cardiovascular and metabolic issues, potentially due to a healthier stress response.
  • In a study, male offspring from long-lived families had significantly lower cortisol levels and blood pressure compared to non-offspring when exposed to stress, indicating a better physiological response to stressors.
  • This adaptive response to stress could lead to reduced damage over time, contributing to their lower incidence of stress-related diseases and promoting healthier aging.

Article Abstract

Individuals enriched for familial longevity display a lower prevalence of age-related diseases, such as cardiovascular- and metabolic diseases. Since these diseases are associated with stress and increased cortisol levels, one of the underlying mechanisms that may contribute to healthy longevity might be a more adaptive response to stress. To investigate this, male middle-aged offspring from long-lived families (n = 31) and male non-offspring (with no familial history of longevity) (n = 26) were randomly allocated to the Trier Social Stress Test or a control condition in an experimental design. Physiological (cortisol, blood pressure, heart rate) and subjective responses were measured during the entire procedure. The results showed that Offspring had lower overall cortisol levels compared to Non-offspring regardless of condition, and lower absolute cortisol output (AUCg) during stress compared to Non-Offspring, while the increase (AUCi) did not differ between groups. In addition, systolic blood pressure in Offspring was lower compared to Non-offspring during the entire procedure. At baseline, Offspring had significantly lower systolic blood pressure and reported less subjective stress than Non-offspring and showed a trend towards lower heart rate. Offspring from long-lived families might thus be less stressed prior to potentially stressful events and consequently show overall lower levels in physiological responses. Although attenuated physiological responding cannot be ruled out, lower starting points and a lower peak level in physiological responding when confronted with an actual stressor, might already limit damage due to stress over a lifetime. Lower physiological responding may also contribute to the lower prevalence of cardiovascular diseases and other stress-related diseases in healthy longevity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10253890.2015.1105213DOI Listing

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