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. 1991 Jul;13(4):710–720. doi: 10.1093/clinids/13.4.710

Stress and Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease

Phillip K Peterson 1,, Chun C Chao 1, Thomas Molitor 1, Michael Murtaugh 1, Franc Strgar 1, Burt M Sharp 1
PMCID: PMC7792926  PMID: 1925292

Abstract

Despite inherent difficulties in defining and measuring stress, a scientific framework has been provided in recent years for understanding how disruptive life experiences might be translated into altered susceptibility to infectious diseases. Studies of the effects of stress on pathogenesis of infectious disease are highly relevant to assessment of the biological importance of the immune impairments that have been associated with stress. With a few notable exceptions, investigations of viral infections in humans and in animal models support the hypothesis that stress promotes the pathogenesis of such infections. Similar conclusions can be drawn from studies of bacterial infections in humans and animals and from a small number of studies of parasitic infections in rodent models. While many of these studies have substantial limitations, the data nonetheless suggest that stress is a potential cofactor in the pathogenesis of infectious disease. Given recent unprecedented advances in the neurosciences, in immunology, and in the field of microbial pathogenesis, the relationship between stress and infection should be a fruitful topic for interdisciplinary research.


Articles from Reviews of Infectious Diseases are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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