In the 1970s, Sterling and Eyer were studying the 20th-century morbidity and mortality rates of age-specific cohorts in the United States and noticed a correlation between mortality rates of age-specific cohorts and the saturation of the labor market at the time the age-specific cohorts were entering the labor force. They discovered that the cohorts who entered the labor market during the
Great Depression and the resulting economic boom in the 1940s had a lower increased mortality rate due to less job competition and insecurity compared to the cohorts prior to the 1930s and since the 1950s. They also noted a correlation of major stressful events, such as
bereavement, divorce, unemployment, and migration, to a higher mortality rate. Despite a preconceived notion that a reduced mortality rate in a younger cohort would experience more chronic diseases later in age, Sterling and Eyer found contradictory evidence that younger cohorts with higher mortality rates actually experienced more chronic health problems such as
cardiovascular disease later in life, following the trend of consistently increased morbidity and mortality rates throughout their generation. To explain these epidemiological phenomena, Sterling and Eyer suggested social and systemic stress in the setting of advancing capitalism and
industrialization to be the main driver of increased morbidity and mortality rates in age-specific cohorts. These studies became the foundation of conceptualizing allostasis a decade later. Sterling and Eyer proposed the concept of allostasis in 1988 to better explain the process of physiological changes in the individual level that are shaped by large-scale epidemiological patterns. Animal studies have also shown non-homeostatic patterns in times of
arousal (or stress). The body elevates blood pressure during stress and returns to normal when the stressor is removed; yet, when the stress becomes chronic, the blood pressure may not return to normal and instead stay elevated.
Mechanism of action Allostasis depends on the brain's ability to coordinate all of the organs' functions by innervating organ cells to perform a certain function as well as synthesizing and releasing signaling mechanisms, such as hormones and neurotransmitters. In response to stress, the brain directly innervates the thyroid and pancreas for energy regulation, sends signals to the cardiovascular system to increase
cardiac output, stimulates the
adrenal glands to release cortisol and aldosterone, and releases hormones from the
pituitary gland such as
ACTH to regulate urine output through the
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. The brain is able to overcome negative feedback in these localized systems and continuously evaluate the body's internal set-points. By doing so, the body can regulate its resources and energy storage efficiently. Another key component of allostasis is the brain's perception and subsequent adaptation to chronic stress. Sterling and Eyer theorized that the brain can anticipate stressors to prepare the body to respond adequately to environmental demands through
classical conditioning. If the brain persistently interprets or even anticipates stress, then it may cause
epigenetic changes to permanently adapt to a chronic state of arousal that results in physiological changes such as thickened blood vessels to support the increased cardiac output and down-regulation of stress hormone receptors.
Regulation of the immune system The brain normally coordinates an immune response against a foreign threat that involves the synthesis, differentiation, and migration of immune cells, release of
cytokines and
interleukins, elevating the internal temperature set-point, and redirecting metabolic needs to support this effort. However, if the brain interprets an external stress demand as more urgent, it may supersede the immune and
inflammatory responses and stimulate release of immune-suppressing stress hormones such as ACTH and cortisol. Once the stressor is resolved, the body resumes to mounting an adequate immune and inflammatory response, which may explain why it is often seen that a person falls ill after acute stress. Due to the interconnected nature of the brain's regulation of stress, the immune system, and the
endocrine system, allostasis may play a role in the development of
cancer. == Application of concept ==