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Simple Spit and Blood Tests might detect
Burnout before It happens
Newswise, February 22, 2011 — Your blood and
the level of a hormone in your spit could
reveal if you’re on the point of burnout,
according to research undertaken by Dr.
Sonia Lupien and Robert-Paul Juster of the
Centre for Studies on Human Stress of
Louis-H. Lafontaine Hospital and the
University of Montreal.
In addition to professional and personal
suffering, burnout puts distressed workers
at further risk of physical and
psychological problems if ignored.
This is significant, as burnout, clinical
depression, or anxiety related to the
workplace affects at least 10% of North
Americans and Europeans, according to
estimates prepared by the International
Labor Organization.
“We hypothesized that healthy workers with
chronic stress and with mild burnout
symptoms would have worse physiological
dysregulations and lower cortisol levels – a
profile consistent with burnout,” Juster
explained.
Cortisol is a stress hormone involved in our
bodies stress response and naturally as part
of our body’s daily rhythm.
Cortisol levels are often high in people
suffering from depression, while it tends to
be low in cases of burnout. Too much
cortisol can be as bad as too little when it
comes to both mental and physical health.
Chronic stress and misbalanced cortisol
levels can exert a kind of domino effect on
connected biological systems.
The term “allostatic load” represents the
physiological problems or ‘wear and tear’
that ensue in these different systems
related to risks for diabetes,
cardiovascular disease, and immune problems.
By looking at various factors such as
insulin, sugar, cholesterol, blood pressure,
and inflammation, an allostatic load index
can be constructed and then used to detect
problems before they occur.
“The strength of the allostatic load model
is its flexible inclusion of numerous
biological systems that get strained by
chronic stress. Complementary use of saliva
samples and validated questionnaires allows
us to go beyond measuring susceptibilities
to, say, metabolic syndromes or heart
problems, but also into the realm of mental
health,” Juster said.
The results of this first pilot study were
obtained by testing thirty middle-aged
participants.
In addition to undergoing routine blood
measures that assessed allostatic load,
participants were instructed to collect
saliva at home and during a laboratory
paradigm.
They also filled out questionnaires related
to their current stress levels as well as
symptoms of depression and burnout.
This research is part of a greater effort to
develop personalized medicine in this field.
Personalized medicine targets the
customization of treatment according to the
needs of the individual.
“In an effort to advance person-centered
approaches in prevention and treatment
strategies, we have to investigate the
biopsychosocial signatures of specific
diseases,” Lupien said.
“For conditions like burnout where we have
no consensus on diagnostic criteria and
where there is overlap with symptoms of
depression, it is essential to use multiple
methods of analysis.
“One potential signature of burnout appears
to be fatigued production of the stress
hormone cortisol and dysregulations of the
physiological systems that interact with
this stress hormone.”
Critically, people with burnout are often
treated with anti-depressant medications
that lower cortisol levels.
If cortisol is already lower than it should
be, this course of treatment could represent
a therapeutic mistake.
“The use of an allostatic load index gives
researchers and clinicians a window to see
how chronic stress is straining the person.
“In the future, we need studies that track
people over time to determine whether this
profile of low cortisol and physiological
dysregulations is indeed burnout’s
autograph. If so, science will be one step
closer to helping distressed workers before
they burn out,” Juster noted.
The research was published in Psychoneuroendocrinologyand
received funding from the Canadian
Institutes of Health Research. Dr. Sonia
Lupien is Scientific Director of Fernand-Seguin
Research Centre of Louis–H. Lafontaine
Hospital and is an associate professor with
the Department of Psychiatry at Université
de Montréal.
Dr. Lupien is the Founder and Director of
the Centre for Studies on Human Stress. She
also holds a Senior Investigator Chair on
Sex, Gender and Mental Health from the
Canadian Institute of Gender and Health (IGH).
Juster is affiliated with the Fernand-Seguin
Research Centre of Louis-H. Lafontaine
Hospital and the Centre for Studies on Human
Stress. He’s a Ph.D. candidate in the
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery at
McGill University.