Your personality could influence how you fight disease
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The extent to which our personalities determine aspects of our lives
and health has increasingly been the subject of research over the last
few years. There was the suggestion, for example, that being a morning person or a night owl might reveal a lot about our personality. But scientifically speaking, what do we actually mean by our "personality"?
When you break it down, personality can be defined as a collection of
distinct psychological traits which remain fairly constant over time
and therefore shape the way we react to the world around us. These
traits include extroversion/introversion (how sociable we are),
neuroticism (the tendency towards negativity) and conscientiousness
(which includes how cautious we are and how carefully we plan). We all
know where we fall on these various scales and how it impacts our
friendship circle, the way we perform our jobs and even how we cope with
adversity — but can it actually affect our health?
In a recent study,
Kavita Vadhara and colleagues correlated different personality traits
with biological immune responses — that is, how geared up our body is to
deal with threats to our immune system. And the results of their
research led to some interesting insights into how personality type may
affect our immune system.
The team asked 121 healthy students to complete personality
questionnaires to assess, among other traits, extroversion, neuroticism
and conscientiousness. They also took blood samples and from these they
investigated the activity of 19 different genes involved in inflammatory
immune response, as well as genes involved in defence against viruses.
Inflammation is an immune response which helps the body fight
infection and speeds up recovery from injury. The two most significant
effects that Vedhara noticed was that extroversion was associated with
increased expression of pro-inflammatory genes, whereas
conscientiousness had the opposite effect (decreased pro-inflammatory
gene expression). The results would suggest that extroverts have a
greater ability to deal with infection and injury but there are
downsides to increased levels of inflammation, including a higher
probability of developing auto-immune diseases.
Before you jump for joy that your outgoing personality means you may
be better at fighting off illness, it's important to note that these
results are just an observation of one population of people, and are in
no way a solid prediction of how an individual will deal with illness.
In fact, the genes investigated in this study only represent a minuscule
proportion of the genes important in our immune response. It is
possible that in introverted, highly conscientious people, other areas
of the immune response might be much stronger. This remains to be
tested.
What is influencing what?
One of the most interesting questions raised by this study is what is
influencing what: could it be that the immune system influences our
behavior? Quite possibility. It has been shown that small molecules
called cytokines are released from our immune cells and appear to be
able to cross the blood-brain barrier and therefore affect the activity
of cells in our brain. For example, some cytokines can influence the
production of important brain signaling molecules such as serotonin and
this process has been highlighted as important in depression.
It is not known whether the differences in inflammatory gene
expression seen between extroverts and introverts could be linked to
cytokine production in this way, but it is an interesting possibility.
Whatever the cause of these interesting observations, the Nottingham
study is an exciting milestone in the ongoing investigation into the
link between personality and health, and the part that our immune system
might play. The fact that personality traits could affect our
inflammatory response, or vice versa, could have significant impacts in
how we treat disease in the future.
Source:Mashable