Stress Concepts - Brain's First Alert
- Stress: Body's response to perceived threats (stressors), disrupting homeostasis.
- Stressors:
- Physical: Injury, infection, pain.
- Psychological: Exams, loss, major life changes.
- Social: Isolation, social rejection.
- Brain's Initial Rapid Response (First Alert):
- Amygdala (threat detection) rapidly activates Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS).
- Purpose: Mobilize energy for "Fight or Flight".
- Adrenal medulla releases catecholamines: Adrenaline & Noradrenaline.
- Effects: ↑Heart rate, ↑BP, ↑Respiration, ↑Glucose, sharpened senses.
- Key Brain Areas:
- Amygdala: Primary threat sensor.
- Locus Coeruleus: Norepinephrine source, triggers alertness.
- Prefrontal Cortex (PFC): Evaluates threat, modulates response.

⭐ The "fight or flight" response, mediated by the SNS and catecholamines, is a rapid, short-lived adaptation crucial for immediate survival.
HPA Axis Anatomy & Hormones - Cortisol Command Chain
- Anatomical Trio:
- Hypothalamus: Specifically, the Paraventricular Nucleus (PVN).
- Anterior Pituitary: Contains corticotroph cells.
- Adrenal Cortex: Zona Fasciculata layer produces cortisol.
- Hormonal Relay (The "Stress Circuit"):
- Hypothalamus secretes CRH (Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone).
- CRH stimulates Anterior Pituitary to release ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic Hormone).
- ACTH targets Adrenal Cortex, triggering Cortisol (a glucocorticoid) synthesis.
- Cortisol's Role: Mobilizes energy (↑glucose), modulates immunity, reduces inflammation.
- Control Mechanism: Cortisol exerts negative feedback, inhibiting CRH and ACTH release. 📌 "Cortisol Cuts" CRH/ACTH.

⭐ Dexamethasone Suppression Test (DST): Used to assess HPA axis function. Failure to suppress cortisol after dexamethasone administration suggests HPA axis hyperactivity (e.g., Cushing's syndrome, severe depression).
HPA Axis Regulation & Dysregulation - Feedback Loop Faults
- Normal Regulation: Cortisol provides negative feedback to Hypothalamus (↓CRH) & Pituitary (↓ACTH).
- Dysregulation Triggers: Chronic stress, genetic vulnerability.
- Core Fault: Impaired negative feedback mechanism.
- Reduced glucocorticoid receptor (GR) sensitivity or density (hippocampus, hypothalamus, pituitary).
- Result: Cortisol fails to adequately inhibit CRH/ACTH secretion.
- Consequences:
- Sustained HPA axis hyperactivity → ↑Cortisol (hypercortisolemia).
- Associated with: Depression, Anxiety Disorders, PTSD.
- Hippocampal damage (due to cortisol toxicity) further impairs feedback.

⭐ Dexamethasone Suppression Test (DST) non-suppression (failure of cortisol to suppress ACTH/cortisol after dexamethasone) is a common biological marker in major depression, indicating HPA axis hyperactivity and impaired feedback.
HPA Axis in Psychiatry - Mood Under Stress
- Core Pathway: Stress activates Hypothalamus (CRH) → Pituitary (ACTH) → Adrenal glands (Cortisol).
- Cortisol's Role: Primary stress hormone; regulates metabolism, immune response. Provides negative feedback to HPA axis.
- Dysregulation & Mood Disorders:
- Depression: Often ↑ cortisol (hypercortisolemia), impaired negative feedback (e.g., Dexamethasone Suppression Test non-suppression). Linked to hippocampal volume ↓.
- Anxiety (PTSD): Variable findings; some show ↓ cortisol, others altered diurnal rhythm or enhanced negative feedback.
- Bipolar Disorder: HPA axis hyperactivity common during mood episodes.
- Mechanisms of Damage: Chronic stress → sustained ↑ cortisol → neuroinflammation, ↓ neurogenesis, altered neurotransmitter function (serotonin, norepinephrine, dopamine).
⭐ Persistent HPA axis hyperactivity, leading to elevated cortisol levels, is strongly implicated in the pathophysiology of Major Depressive Disorder and is linked to structural changes like hippocampal atrophy.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- The HPA axis (Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal) is the body's central stress response system.
- CRH from hypothalamus triggers pituitary ACTH, which stimulates adrenal cortisol release.
- Cortisol exerts negative feedback on the hypothalamus and pituitary.
- Chronic stress causes HPA axis dysregulation, linked to depression and anxiety disorders.
- Dexamethasone Suppression Test (DST) evaluates HPA axis; non-suppression often seen in depression.
- Hippocampal glucocorticoid receptors (GR) are vital for feedback; chronic stress can ↓ GR sensitivity/number.
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