Showing posts with label Conditions Linked to HPA Axis Hyperactivity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conditions Linked to HPA Axis Hyperactivity. Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Conditions Linked to HPA Axis Hyperactivity

 

🧬 Conditions Linked to HPA Axis Hyperactivity

1. Depression

  • People with major depressive disorder (MDD) often have elevated cortisol levels.

  • The brain's feedback system (hippocampus and prefrontal cortex) gets damaged by long-term cortisol.

  • This causes:

    • Low mood

    • Fatigue

    • Poor appetite or overeating

    • Sleep problems

    • Loss of interest or pleasure

2. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

  • PTSD is triggered by severe trauma.

  • The HPA axis response becomes dysregulated:

    • Cortisol might actually be lower in PTSD (unlike depression), but the system is still "on edge."

    • High CRH levels → brain becomes hypersensitive to fear and threat.

  • This leads to:

    • Flashbacks

    • Hypervigilance

    • Nightmares

    • Emotional numbing

3. Burnout (Chronic Workplace or Emotional Stress)

  • Long-term pressure without rest causes the HPA axis to stay active, and eventually collapse (fatigue of the system).

  • Cortisol may be high at first, then drop too low (exhaustion stage).

  • This leads to:

    • Constant tiredness

    • Loss of motivation

    • Feeling detached or cynical

    • Trouble concentrating


🎯 In Short

ConditionHPA Axis EffectMain Symptoms
DepressionOveractive, high cortisolSadness, fatigue, sleep/appetite problems
PTSDDysregulated, CRH high, cortisol variesFlashbacks, fear, insomnia
BurnoutInitially high, then fatigued HPA axisExhaustion, low energy, detachment