Cortisol, a hormone secreted by the adrenal glands in times of stress,
may help people cope when it is given before an unpleasant situation.



Most studies of cortisol have looked at the hormone's negative
effects when chronic stress keeps its level high. Psychologists Oliver
T. Wolf <http://www.f1000medicine.com/member/7620880898581487>   and
Serkan Het <http://lib.bioinfo.pl/auth:Het,S>   of  Bielefeld University
<http://www.uni-bielefeld.de/International/>   in Germany were
interested in the short-term effects of cortisol on mood. They gave 22
young women 30 milligrams of cortisol-a fairly high dose. A control
group of 22 women received a placebo.

All the subjects where then put in a stressful situation. They were
asked to give a speech in a fake job interview in afterward to count
backward by 17s from a large number while being monitored by stern-faced
examiners and videotaped the whole time, the women were given mood
questionnaires before and after their interview.

"The women who got cortisol-compared with those getting
placebos-reported less negative effect after her stress test," Wolf
says. Exactly how cortisol provided this protection is not clear.

"Cortisol is active in several brain regions that modulate
emotions," Wolf explains. "One possibility is that cortisol
interferes with retrieving emotional memories, so the subjects
weren't able to recall their unpleasant experiences as well. "If
this is true, he adds, it could point the ways toward using cortisol to
treat people who have survived terrible events and suffer from post
traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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