B Chu, K Marwaha, T Sanvictores, D Ayers - 2019 - europepmc.org
Any physical or psychological stimuli that disrupt homeostasis result in a stress response. The stimuli are called stressors and physiological and behavioral changes in response to …
H Selye - Journal of human stress, 1975 - Taylor & Francis
An attempt is made to further clarify present areas of controversy in the stress field, in response to a two-part article by Dr. John W. Mason which concludes in this issue of the …
GS Everly, Jr, JM Lating, GS Everly… - A clinical guide to the …, 2019 - Springer
In the first chapter, we provided the following working definition of the stress response:“Stress is a physiological response that serves as a mechanism of mediation …
This first book to address the most urgent issues combines a solid research approach with applied individual and stress issues. It focuses on our latest knowledge of various causes of …
A Bali, AS Jaggi - European journal of pharmacology, 2015 - Elsevier
Stress is a state of threatened homeostasis during which a variety of adaptive processes are activated to produce physiological and behavioral changes. Preclinical models are pivotal …
The cumulative science linking stress to negative health outcomes is vast. Stress can affect health directly, through autonomic and neuroendocrine responses, but also indirectly …
Environmental events, both physical and emotional, can produce stress reactions to widely varying degrees. Stress can affect many aspects of physiology, and levels of stress …
Objective.—This article defines stress and related concepts and reviews their historical development. The notion of a stress system as the effector of the stress syndrome is …
BS McEwen - Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, 2005 - jpn.ca
The term “allostasis” has been coined to clarify ambiguities associated with the word “stress.” Allostasis refers to the adaptive processes that maintain homeostasis through the …