Effectiveness of stress-relieving strategies in regulating patterns of cortisol secretion and promoting brain health.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to review evidence on whether stress-relieving strategies like mindfulness regulate cortisol secretion and promote brain health.
Results Summary
The abstract suggests that mindfulness and other stress-relieving activities can reduce stress and enhance well-being, potentially regulating cortisol secretion and improving brain health. However, specific efficacy data for mindfulness alone is not detailed.
Population
Healthy populations and potential applications for clinical disorders (e.g., Parkinson's disease).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
focusing on positive characteristics | decrease | stress | - | - | have been shown to reduce | #1 |
focusing on positive characteristics | increase | well-being | - | - | enhance | #2 |
art/music therapies | decrease | stress | - | - | have been shown to reduce | #3 |
art/music therapies | increase | well-being | - | - | enhance | #4 |
mindfulness | decrease | stress | - | - | have been shown to reduce | #5 |
mindfulness | increase | well-being | - | - | enhance | #6 |
yoga | decrease | stress | - | - | have been shown to reduce | #7 |
yoga | increase | well-being | - | - | enhance | #8 |
engaging with nature and/or physical activity | decrease | stress | - | - | have been shown to reduce | #9 |
engaging with nature and/or physical activity | increase | well-being | - | - | enhance | #10 |
engaging in stress-relieving strategies | neutral | patterns of cortisol secretion | - | - | promotes regulation and/or restoration | #11 |
Stress leads to ill-health and disease, and with today's fast-pace western society, engaging in strategies to relieve stress is crucial for good health across the life-course. Activities such as focusing on positive characteristics, art/music therapies, mindfulness, yoga and engaging with nature and/or physical activity have been shown to reduce stress and enhance well-being. It is thought that patterns of cortisol secretion, which are regulated by the brain, are a key mediator of stress-disease and well-being-health links. Measurement of cortisol in saliva is a non-invasive and ecologically valid tool for detecting early changes in brain health, as well as evaluating the effectiveness of strategies in relieving stress and improving brain health as well as monitoring stress-related brain changes. This chapter will review the evidence that engaging in stress-relieving strategies promotes regulation and/or restoration of patterns of cortisol secretion. If such strategies are found to be effective in healthy populations, they could potentially inform ways of promoting brain health and the prevention or delay of clinical disorders involving disorders in the brain (e.g., Parkinson's disease) and symptoms experienced with such disorders. To inform this field of research, recommendations are provided for the use of salivary cortisol as a marker of early monitoring of brain health and effectiveness of stress-alleviating interventions.