Agorastos Agorastos, Olff Miranda
II. Department of Psychiatry, Division of Neurosciences, School of Medicine, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.
VA Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health (CESAMH), VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA, USA.
Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2020 Nov 27;11(1):1833644. doi: 10.1080/20008198.2020.1833644.
Humans have an evolutionary need for a well-preserved internal 'clock', adjusted to the 24-hour rotation period of our planet. This intrinsic circadian timing system enables the temporal organization of numerous physiologic processes, from gene expression to behaviour. The human circadian system is tightly and bidirectionally interconnected to the human stress system, as both systems regulate each other's activity along the anticipated diurnal challenges. The understanding of the temporal relationship between stressors and stress responses is critical in the molecular pathophysiology of stress-and trauma-related diseases, such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In this narrative review, we present the functional components of the stress and circadian system and their multilevel interactions and discuss how traumatic stress can affect the harmonious interplay between the two systems. Circadian dysregulation after trauma exposure (posttraumatic chronodisruption) may represent a core feature of trauma-related disorders mediating enduring neurobiological correlates of traumatic stress through a loss of the temporal order at different organizational levels. Posttraumatic chronodisruption may, thus, affect fundamental properties of neuroendocrine, immune and autonomic systems, leading to a breakdown of biobehavioral adaptive mechanisms with increased stress sensitivity and vulnerability. Given that many traumatic events occur in the late evening or night hours, we also describe how the time of day of trauma exposure can differentially affect the stress system and, finally, discuss potential chronotherapeutic interventions. Understanding the stress-related mechanisms susceptible to chronodisruption and their role in PTSD could deliver new insights into stress pathophysiology, provide better psychochronobiological treatment alternatives and enhance preventive strategies in stress-exposed populations.
人类在进化过程中需要一个保存完好的内部“时钟”,该时钟与我们星球24小时的自转周期相适应。这种内在的昼夜节律计时系统能够对从基因表达到行为的众多生理过程进行时间组织。人类昼夜节律系统与人类应激系统紧密且双向互联,因为这两个系统会沿着预期的昼夜挑战相互调节彼此的活动。了解应激源与应激反应之间的时间关系,对于创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)等与应激和创伤相关疾病的分子病理生理学至关重要。在这篇叙述性综述中,我们介绍了应激和昼夜节律系统的功能组成部分及其多层次相互作用,并讨论了创伤性应激如何影响这两个系统之间的和谐相互作用。创伤暴露后的昼夜节律失调(创伤后时间紊乱)可能代表创伤相关疾病的一个核心特征,通过在不同组织水平上失去时间顺序来介导创伤性应激的持久神经生物学关联。因此,创伤后时间紊乱可能会影响神经内分泌、免疫和自主神经系统的基本特性,导致生物行为适应性机制崩溃,应激敏感性和易感性增加。鉴于许多创伤事件发生在深夜或夜间,我们还描述了创伤暴露的时间如何不同地影响应激系统,最后讨论了潜在的时间治疗干预措施。了解易受时间紊乱影响的应激相关机制及其在PTSD中的作用,可能会为应激病理生理学带来新的见解,提供更好的心理时间生物学治疗选择,并加强对应激暴露人群的预防策略。