Seeding stress resilience through inoculation
Stress is a generalized set of physiological and psychological responses observed when an organism is placed under challenging circumstances. The stress response allows organisms to reattain the equilibrium in face of perturbations. Unfortunately, chronic and/or traumatic exposure to stress frequent...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-885992023-02-28T17:02:39Z Seeding stress resilience through inoculation Ashokan, Archana Sivasubramanian, Meenalochani Mitra, Rupshi School of Biological Sciences Corticosterone DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences Chronic Stress Stress is a generalized set of physiological and psychological responses observed when an organism is placed under challenging circumstances. The stress response allows organisms to reattain the equilibrium in face of perturbations. Unfortunately, chronic and/or traumatic exposure to stress frequently overwhelms coping ability of an individual. This is manifested as symptoms affecting emotions and cognition in stress-related mental disorders. Thus environmental interventions that promote resilience in face of stress have much clinical relevance. Focus of the bulk of relevant neurobiological research at present remains on negative aspects of health and psychological outcomes of stress exposure. Yet exposure to the stress itself can promote resilience to subsequent stressful episodes later in the life. This is especially true if the prior stress occurs early in life, is mild in its magnitude, and is controllable by the individual. This articulation has been referred to as “stress inoculation,” reminiscent of resilience to the pathology generated through vaccination by attenuated pathogen itself. Using experimental evidence from animal models, this review explores relationship between nature of the “inoculum” stress and subsequent psychological resilience. MOE (Min. of Education, S’pore) Published version 2018-12-12T08:33:19Z 2019-12-06T17:06:57Z 2018-12-12T08:33:19Z 2019-12-06T17:06:57Z 2016 Journal Article Ashokan, A., Sivasubramanian, M., & Mitra, R. (2016). Seeding Stress Resilience through Inoculation. Neural Plasticity, 2016, 4928081-. doi:10.1155/2016/4928081 2090-5904 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88599 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46928 10.1155/2016/4928081 26881112 en Neural Plasticity © 2016 Archana Ashokan et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 6 p. application/pdf |
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Corticosterone DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences Chronic Stress Ashokan, Archana Sivasubramanian, Meenalochani Mitra, Rupshi Seeding stress resilience through inoculation |
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Stress is a generalized set of physiological and psychological responses observed when an organism is placed under challenging circumstances. The stress response allows organisms to reattain the equilibrium in face of perturbations. Unfortunately, chronic and/or traumatic exposure to stress frequently overwhelms coping ability of an individual. This is manifested as symptoms affecting emotions and cognition in stress-related mental disorders. Thus environmental interventions that promote resilience in face of stress have much clinical relevance. Focus of the bulk of relevant neurobiological research at present remains on negative aspects of health and psychological outcomes of stress exposure. Yet exposure to the stress itself can promote resilience to subsequent stressful episodes later in the life. This is especially true if the prior stress occurs early in life, is mild in its magnitude, and is controllable by the individual. This articulation has been referred to as “stress inoculation,” reminiscent of resilience to the pathology generated through vaccination by attenuated pathogen itself. Using experimental evidence from animal models, this review explores relationship between nature of the “inoculum” stress and subsequent psychological resilience. |
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School of Biological Sciences |
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School of Biological Sciences Ashokan, Archana Sivasubramanian, Meenalochani Mitra, Rupshi |
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Article |
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Ashokan, Archana Sivasubramanian, Meenalochani Mitra, Rupshi |
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Ashokan, Archana |
title |
Seeding stress resilience through inoculation |
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Seeding stress resilience through inoculation |
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Seeding stress resilience through inoculation |
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Seeding stress resilience through inoculation |
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Seeding stress resilience through inoculation |
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seeding stress resilience through inoculation |
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2018 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88599 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46928 |
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