Sympathoadrenal Activity and Psychosocial Stress

Abstract
Recent studies have indicated that the increase in plasma norepinephrine and sympathetic activity with aging in healthy subjects is largely due to long-term cigarette smoking. In patients who have or have had duodenal ulcer the increase in plasma norepinephrine with age was markedly increased. These patients as a group perceive their lives somewhat more stressful than the general population and they tend to die prematurely due to smoking-associated diseases. These patients may select dysfunctional coping strategies like smoking, which may result in organ pathologies and a compensatory increase in plasma norepinephrine. No close correlation has been established between plasma epinephrine and "ill health." High plasma epinephrine levels may have a deleterious effect on the cardiovascular system in elderly subjects during certain conditions. In a population study, we found, however, that low resting plasma epinephrine levels were associated with an unfavorable survival rate. We speculate that an inadequate response to psychosocial stress and the choice of dysfunctional coping strategies may be more harmful and cause more "ill health" than hypersecretion of stress hormones like epinephrine and cortisol, which has been the traditional view. We suggest that there are different stress states. Stress hormones like epinephrine and cortisol may play a major role during situations like combat, illness, and strenuous exercise. In response to psychosocial stress, dysfunctional coping strategies are, however, largely responsible for harmful effects of stress.