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Managing stress mindfully

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Title: Managing stress mindfully


1
Managing stress mindfully
  • Dr Craig Hassed
  • Senior Lecturer
  • Monash University
  • Dept. of General Practice

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Mathers CD, Loncar D. PLoS Med. 2006
Nov3(11)e442.
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The fight or flight response
  • A natural, necessary and appropriate
    physiological response to a threatening situation
  • This response, based on a clearly perceived
    threat, is encoded into our physiology (through
    the brain and Sympathetic Nervous System) to
    preserve life
  • Elevation of blood-pressure, heart rate
  • Increased respiration and metabolic rate
  • Diversion of blood-flow to muscles
  • Platelet adhesiveness
  • Effects on immunity and inflammatory hormones
    (e.g. cortisol, cytokines, interleukins etc)
  • Changes clinically significant for people with
    high SNS reactivity to (perceived) stressful
    events

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Allostatic load
  • Prolonged stress leads to wear-and-tear on the
    body (allostatic load)
  • Mediated through the Sympathetic Nervous System
  • Allostatic load leads to
  • Impaired immunity
  • Accelerated atherosclerosis
  • Metabolic syndrome (hypertension, high
    cholesterol, type-2 diabetes, central obesity)
  • Bone demineralization (osteoporosis)
  • McEwen BS. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 200410321-7.

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Allostatic load
  • Allostatic load also leads to
  • Atrophy of nerve cells in the brain
  • Hippocampal formation learning and memory
  • Prefrontal cortex working memory, executive
    function
  • Growth of Amygdala mediates fear response
  • Many of these processes are seen in chronic
    depression and anxiety
  • Chronic stress can sensitise the brain for the
    later development of depression
  • McEwen BS. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 200410321-7.

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I dont like Mondays
  • Consistently found that Monday mornings are peak
    period for heart attacks only among the working
    population.
  • Mondays are also the peak time for strokes.
  • Weekends are associated with a reduced incidence
    of AMI.
  • Peters RW. et al. American Journal of Cardiology
    199678(11)1198-201.
  • Peters RW. et al. Circulation 199694(6)1346-9.
  • Willich SN. et al. Circulation 199490(1)87-93.
  • Manfredini R. et al. American Journal of Medicine
    2001111(5)401-3.

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The Relaxation Response genomics
  • This study provides the first compelling
    evidence that the RR elicits specific gene
    expression changes in short-term and long-term
    practitioners. Our results suggest consistent and
    constitutive changes in gene expression resulting
    from RR may relate to long term physiological
    effects.
  • Dusek JA, Otu HH, Wohlhueter AL, et al. Genomic
    counter-stress changes induced by the relaxation
    response. PLoS ONE. 2008 Jul 23(7)e2576.

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Gender and the stress response
  • Men and women respond to stress differently
  • Early stress research on men and not women
  • Men respond to stress through fight or flight
  • Predominantly sympathetic arousal accentuated by
    testosterone
  • Women experience tend and befriend response
  • Fight and flight moderated through oxytocin and
    other hormones
  • Secreted at times of bonding, nurturing, breast
    feeding and relationships
  • Taylor SE et al. Psych Review 2000107(3)411-29.

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Football and heart attacks
  • FIFA World Cup (Germany 2006) study on relation
    b/w emotional stress and cardiac emergencies
  • Matches involving the German team incidence of
    cardiac emergencies 2.66 times higher than usual
  • Men incidence was 3.26 times
  • Women incidence was 1.82 times
  • Incidence higher in those with pre-existing heart
    disease
  • Wilbert-Lampen U, Leistner D, Greven S, et al.
    NEJM 2008 358 (5)475-483.

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Stress and perception
  • Man is not disturbed by events, but by the view
    he takes of them.
  • Epictetus
  • An optimist sees an opportunity in every
    calamity a pessimist sees a calamity in every
    opportunity.
  • Winston Churchill

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Antidepressants
  • Data on all clinical trials submitted to the US
    FDA
  • Virtually no effect greater than placebo for mild
    to moderate depression
  • Relatively small difference for very severe
    depression
  • Kirsch I et al. PLoS Medicine 2008 Feb5(2)e45
    doi10.1371/journal.pmed.0050045
  • On brain scan, placebo response biologically
    similar to receiving active drug
  • Mayberg HS, et al. Am J Psych. 2002159(5)728-37.

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Wine, marketing and enjoyment
  • Brain scans used while subjects tasted wines that
    they believed to be different and sold at
    different prices
  • 5 tastings / 3 wines, 2 sampled twice (one
    expensive and one cheap) with high and low
    price-tags (once with real price once with false
    price)
  • Increasing the price of a wine increases
    subjective reports of flavor pleasantness
  • Higher price corresponded with increased activity
    in the pleasure centres of the brain
  • Plassman H et al. PNAS 2008105(3)1050-4.

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The body is the shadow of the soul. Marsilio
Ficino (1433-99)
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Hebbes hypothesis
  • Neurons that fire together, wire together.

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Chronic pain and the brain
  • Chronic pain syndromes are common
  • Often difficult to demonstrate somatic disease
  • Brain pain pathways become sensitized and
    maintained by sustained attention and arousal
  • A high level of reactivity sensitises the brain
    to pain
  • This may be why reducing reactivity through
    mindfulness reduces pain
  • Eriksen HR, Ursin H. J Psychosom Res.
    200456(4)445-8.
  • Ursin H, Eriksen HR. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2001
    Mar933119-29.

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Mental Practice and stroke
  • Mental practice (MP) of a motor skill activates
    the same musculature and neural pathways as
    physical practice of the same skill
  • RCT on stroke patients compared the efficacy of a
    rehab /- MP vs. a placebo intervention
  • Experimental group received 30-minute MP sessions
    twice/week for 6 weeks as well as usual rehab
  • Patients had moderate motor deficits
  • No pre-existing group differences
  • Subjects receiving MP showed
  • statistically and clinically significant
    reductions in impairment
  • significant increases in daily arm function
  • new ability to perform important activities of
    daily living
  • Page SJ, Levine P, Leonard A. Mental practice in
    chronic stroke results of a randomized,
    placebo-controlled trial. Stroke. 2007
    Apr38(4)1293-7. Epub 2007 Mar 1.

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Platos 3 aspects of the psyche
  • 3 aspects of the psyche (soul)
  • Reason (intelligence)
  • Emotion (passion, courage)
  • Appetite (instincts, pleasure)
  • Reason governs emotions and appetites
  • Health of body and mind are based upon the right
    alignment of these elements

Botticellis Pallas and the Centaur
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Plato The Republic
  • Temperance is the ordering or controlling of
    certain pleasures and desires this is curiously
    enough implied in the saying of a man being his
    own master. In the human soul there is a better
    and a worse principle and when the better has
    the worse under control, then a man is said to be
    master of himself and this is a term of praise.

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Neuroscience and the brain
  • Corresponding areas in the brain
  • Frontal lobes reasoning and emotional
    regulation
  • Higher reasoning
  • Emotional regulation
  • Left (positive) vs. right (negative)
  • Appetite regulation
  • Directs immune system
  • Limbic system emotion and courage
  • Mesolimbic reward system appetites

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Allostatic load
  • Allostatic load also leads to
  • Atrophy of nerve cells in the brain
  • Hippocampal formation learning and memory
  • Prefrontal cortex working memory, executive
    function
  • Growth of Amygdala mediates fear response
  • Many of these processes are seen in chronic
    depression and anxiety
  • McEwen BS. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 200410321-7.

33
Empathy and the brain
  • Empathy, or experiencing another's pain, has been
    shown to produce similar changes in brain
    activity as the loved one actually experiencing
    the pain
  • Singer T, Seymour B, O'Doherty J, et al. Science.
    2004 Feb 20303(5661)1157-62.

34
Meditation and compassion
  • Limbic brain regions (insula and anterior
    cingulate cortices) implicated in empathic
    response to another's pain
  • The presentation of distressing sounds associated
    with activation of limbic regions during
    meditation
  • Activation in insula greater in expert than
    novices
  • Lutz A, Brefczynski-Lewis J, Johnstone T,
    Davidson RJ. PLoS ONE. 2008 Mar 263(3)e1897.

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Default states and the brain
  • Most default activity with rumination about the
    multifaceted self
  • Attention-demanding tasks reduce this activity
    and self-preoccupation
  • Gusnard DA. Akbudak E. Shulman GL. Raichle ME.
    PNAS USA 200198(7)4259-64.

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Attention and dementia
  • Brain regions active in default states in young
    adults also show amyloid deposits in adults with
    AD
  • Active tasks tasks associated with paying
    attention
  • Default states when mind is inattentive, idle,
    recalling past
  • Early stages of AD prominent atrophy and
    metabolic abnormalities in these regions
  • Buckner RL et al. J Neurosci. 200525(34)7709-17.
  • Leisure associated with AD risk
  • Lack of diversity
  • Less time on leisure activities
  • Passive leisure activities (principally TV)
  • Nearly four times as likely to develop dementia
    over 40-year f/up
  • Friedland RP et al. Proc Nat Acad Sci USA,
    10.1073/pnas.061002998
  • Scarmeas N et al. Neurology 200157(12)2236-42.

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Attentional blink
  • Information processing
  • Time gap in being able to identify and
    consolidate a stimulus in memory
  • Can take more than half a second before mind is
    free for a second stimulus
  • Person vulnerable to distractor interference
  • 3 months of mindfulness training reduced the
    attentional blink and improved the ability to
    sift out distractors
  • Slagter HA, Lutz A, Greischar L et al. PLOS
    Biology 20075(6)e138. doi10.
    1371/journal.pbio.0050138

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Exam stress and performance
  • High math anxiety led to smaller working memory
    spans
  • Ashcraft MH, Kirk EP. J Exp Psychol Gen. 2001
    Jun130(2)224-37.
  • Performance pressure harms individuals most
    qualified to succeed by consuming the working
    memory capacity that they rely on for their
    superior performance.
  • Beilock SL, Carr TH. Psychol Sci.
    200516(2)101-5.

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Stress-performance curve
     
Performance
High performance
Poor performance / burnout
Stress
Inertia
 
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Stress-performance curve
     
Performance
Peak performance The zone Mindfulness
High performance
Poor performance / burnout
Stress
Inertia
 
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What is mindfulness
  • Mindfulness is a way of being
  • Jon Kabat-Zinn
  • To be or not to be that is the question. And
    thus the native hue of resolution is sicklied
    oer with the pale cast of thought.
  • Shakespeare Hamlet

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  • The faculty of voluntarily bringing back a
    wandering attention over and over again, is the
    very root of judgment, character, and will. No
    one is compos sui if he have it not. An education
    which should improve this faculty would be the
    education par excellence.
  • William James, Principles of Psychology, 1890

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Mindfulness-based therapies
  • Neural plasticity
  • Immune modulation
  • Anti-inflammatory
  • Enhancing immune function
  • Behaviour / lifestyle change
  • Improvements in sleep
  • Rumination
  • General wellbeing
  • Stress
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Eating disorders
  • Panic disorder
  • Symptom control
  • Coping
  • Chronic pain
  • Personality disorder
  • OCD

Ivanovski B, Malhi G. Acta Neuropsychiatrica
20071976-91.
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Basic assumptions
  • We generally operate on automatic pilot and
    unaware of moment-to moment experience
  • We are capable of developing sustained attention
  • Development of this ability is gradual,
    progressive and requires practice
  • Awareness makes life richer and more vivid and
    replaces unconscious reactiveness
  • Gives rise to veridicality (truthfulness) of
    perceptions
  • Awareness enhances perceptiveness, effective
    action and control
  • Grossman P et al. J Psychosomatic Research
    20045735-43.

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MBCT
  • Primary problem a lack of awareness
  • Attention regulation
  • Non-evaluative
  • Develops power of discernment although does not
    seek to analyse or judge thoughts as positive or
    negative
  • Meta-cognition
  • Explores the basic relationship of self to
    thoughts (i.e. no particular relationship)
  • Autonomy through non-attachment
  • Only the present moment matters
  • Present the product of past thoughts, feelings
    and actions
  • Future determined by present thoughts, feelings
    and actions

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Mindfulness and depression
  • CT and MBCT may reduce relapse by changing
    relationships to negative thoughts rather than by
    changing belief in thought content
  • Dont have to control thoughts, but dont have to
    be controlled by them
  • Dont have to reason about the thoughts (as
    compared to conventional CBT)
  • Teasdale JD, Moore RG, Hayhurst H, et al. J
    Consult Clin Psychol. 200270(2)275-87.
  • MBCT reduced relapse from 78 to 36 in 55
    patients with 3 or more previous episodes
  • Ma SH, Teasdale JD. J Consult Clin Psychol.
    200472(1)31-40.

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Mindfulness and happiness
  • Pleasure and happiness are not the same thing
  • Happiness is natural and restores itself given
    the right conditions
  • We all meditate on something or other for better
    or for worse
  • Consciousness gives life to thoughts and feelings
  • We are almost constantly thinking our way out of
    happiness
  • Mindfulness can gently refocuss the attention
    from what is not useful to what is useful
  • It is important to learn to be accepting of, and
    not reactive to, the thoughts and feelings of
    which we wish to be free

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Depersonalization and mindfulness
  • Depersonalization (DP), i.e., feelings of being
    detached from one's own mental processes or body,
    is a form of mental escape from reality
  • Often linked with maltreatment during childhood
  • DP contrasts with mindfulness (being in touch
    with the present moment)
  • Study found a strong inverse correlation between
    DP and mindfulness
  • Michal M. Beutel ME. Jordan J. et al. J Nervous
    Mental Disease. 2007195(8)693-6.

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Emotional Intelligence
  • Mindfulness related to aspects of personality and
    mental health
  • Lower neuroticism, psychological symptoms,
    experiential avoidance, dissociation
  • Higher emotional intelligence and absorption
  • Baer RA, et al. Assessment. 200411(3)191-206.

Definition
Self-awareness Ability to recognise and understand emotions, drives and effects
Self-regulation Can control or redirect disruptive impulses, can think before acting
Motivation Passion for work that goes beyond money or status, energy and persistence
Empathy Ability to understand emotions of others, skill in interacting with others
Social skill Can manage relationships and build networks, can find common ground, rapport
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Mindfulness, brain and immunity
  • Effects on brain and immune function of an 8-week
    clinical training program in mindfulness
  • At the end of course subjects vaccinated with
    influenza vaccine
  • Significant increases in left-sided anterior
    (prefrontal) activation (associated with positive
    mood)
  • Increase in antibody levels
  • Davidson RJ Psychosom Med. 200365(4)564-70.

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Mindfulness and the brain
  • Brain scans on long-term meditators
  • Regions associated with attention, self-awareness
    and sensory processing thicker in meditators
  • Offset age-related cortical thinning evidence
    for cortical plasticity
  • Lazar SW, Kerr CE, Wasserman RH, et al.
    Neuroreport. 200516(17)1893-1897.
  • The regular practice of meditation may have
    neuroprotective effects and reduce the cognitive
    decline associated with normal aging.
  • Pagnoni G. Cekic M. Neurobiology of Aging.
    200728(10)1623-7.

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The ESSENCE of health
  • Education
  • Stress management
  • Spirituality
  • Exercise
  • Nutrition
  • Connectedness
  • Environment

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Health of medical students
  • Health Enhancement Program (HEP) at Monash
    comprises mindfulness and ESSENCE lifestyle
    programs
  • 90.5 of students personally applying mindfulness
  • Improved student wellbeing noted on all measures
  • Reduced depression, hostility and anxiety
    subscale
  • Improved psychological and physical quality of
    life
  • This study is the first to demonstrate an
    overall improvement in medical student wellbeing
    during the pre-exam period suggesting that the
    common decline in wellbeing is avoidable.
  • Hassed C, de Lisle S, Sullivan G, Pier C. Adv
    Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2008 May 31. Epub
    ahead of print

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Mindfulness in medical education
  • At Harvard, a group of faculty members and
    students are developing workshops for first and
    second year students to teach mindfulness and
    self-renewal skills, based on a program pioneered
    by Australias Monash University.
  • Rosenthal JM, Okie S. New England Journal of
    Medicine 2005353111085-8.

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And remember
  • When youre looking at the universe, the universe
    is also looking back at you!
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