Rice University
A Rice University study has found a link between emotional
stress and diabetes, with roots in the brain's ability to control anxiety.
That control lies with the brain's executive functions,
processes that handle attention, inhibition, working memory and cognitive
flexibility and are also involved in reasoning, problem-solving and planning.
The study published in Psychoneuroendocrinology establishes a metabolic chain reaction
that starts with low inhibition, aka attention control, which leaves a person
vulnerable to tempting or distracting information, objects, thoughts or
activities.
Previous studies have shown that such vulnerability can lead to
more frequent anxiety, and anxiety is known to activate a metabolic pathway
responsible for the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, signaling
proteins that include interleukin-6 (IL-6).
Along with cognitive tests that measured attention control, the
Rice study measured levels of both blood glucose and IL-6 in more than 800
adults. IL-6 is a protein the body produces to stimulate immune response and
healing.
It is a biomarker of acute and chronic stress that also has been
associated with a greater likelihood of diabetes and high blood glucose.
Researchers have suspected a link between anxiety and poor
health, including diabetes, for many years but none have detailed the
biological pathway responsible, said lead author Kyle Murdock, a postdoctoral
research fellow in psychology. He said the Rice study takes a deeper look at
how inflammation bridges the two.
"The literature shows individuals with poor inhibition are
more likely to experience stressful thoughts and have a harder time breaking
their attention away from them," Murdock said. "That made me wonder
if there's a stress-induced pathway that could link inhibition with inflammation
and the diseases we're interested in, such as diabetes.
"Plenty of research shows that when individuals are
stressed or anxious or depressed, inflammation goes up," he said.
"The novel part of our study was establishing the pathway from inhibition
to anxiety to inflammation to diabetes."
Murdock works in the Rice lab of Christopher Fagundes, assistant
professor of psychology. The Fagundes lab investigates processes that happen
along the border of psychology and physiology, and how those processes affect
overall health and potential treatments.
The data came from a Midlife Development in the United States
study of 1,255 middle-aged adults whose cognitive abilities were tested two
years apart.
More than 800 of those also underwent blood tests to check IL-6
and glucose levels. The Rice researchers found not only the positive link
between inhibition and diabetes, but the absence of a link between other
cognitive functions and the disease.
They also determined that the pathway only
went in one direction: Inflammation never appeared to affect inhibition.
Murdock said a year as a clinical psychology intern at the Oregon Health and
Science University, where he studied with co-author and psychologist Danny
Duke, led the researchers to think there could also be a feedback loop at play
in those with diabetes.
"Individuals who are anxious are more likely to
avoid treatment and use maladaptive strategies (like smoking or unhealthy
diets) that enhance their blood glucose, which is problematic. It's a snowball
effect: The further they go, the worse it gets," he said.
"We also know that extremely high blood glucose can impact
cognition as well. We talked about how, if we're going to treat these
individuals appropriately, it won't be by sitting them down in a room and
saying, 'Hey, you need to eat better,' or 'You need to use your insulin on
time.'"
The researchers listed several possible interventions, including
mindfulness therapy, stimulant or anti-inflammatory medications and cognitive
behavioral therapy.
"Research shows that people who practice mindfulness
do better on the inhibition tests over time," Murdock said, suggesting
that shifting one's attention away from stressful thoughts may affect
physiological responses.
"I'm a firm believer that mindfulness-based approaches to
treatment are a great idea, for a lot of reasons," Fagundes said.
"That doesn't mean medicines that promote inhibition, such as stimulants,
shouldn't be considered, but a combination of the two could be really
helpful."