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Low stress resilience is linked to increased risk of psoriasis

psoriasis
Credit: Estzer Miller on Pixabay

Young adults who find it harder to cope with stress are more likely to develop psoriasis later in life. Low stress resilience when enlisting for military service involves a 31% higher risk of developing psoriasis compared to high stress resilience. This has been shown by a large register-based study at the University of Gothenburg.

The study

, now published in the Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology, is based on data from more than 1.6 million Swedish men who enlisted for

between 1968 and 2005.

As part of the enlistment process, all the men underwent in accordance with the same strict template. Based on this assessment, the researchers divided up the data on the men's stress resilience into three levels. A fifth (20.4%) of those who enlisted were placed in the lowest group, and a further fifth (21.5%) were placed in the highest group. More than half were therefore placed in the intermediate group.

Data relating to the men was then cross-checked with other registers. The National Patient Register was used to obtain the diagnosis codes for psoriasis and the joint disease psoriatic arthritis.

About 36,000 of the men developed psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis later in life. Low stress resilience in men involves a 31% higher risk of developing psoriasis compared to high stress resilience.

More severe cases of psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis were also found to be particularly clearly linked to stress. For in-patient diagnoses, low stress resilience meant a 79% higher risk of psoriasis and a 53% higher risk of compared to high stress resilience.

Psychological sensitivity

This is the first study to date supporting the hypothesis that sensitivity to stress is a risk factor for psoriasis. As psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory systemic disease, the link to stress could be due to an increased inflammatory response in the body.

"We have shown that lower stress resilience in adolescence is a potential risk factor for psoriasis, at least for men," says the study's lead author Marta Laskowski, a doctoral student in dermatology at the University of Gothenburg and a at Sahlgrenska University Hospital.

"Our results suggest that those with psoriasis have a hereditary psychological sensitivity. It is therefore important that health care professionals also pay attention to the mental well-being of patients with psoriasis."

When estimating the increased risk, the researchers adjusted for other risk factors such as BMI and socioeconomic factors. However, the study could only be adjusted indirectly for smoking, which is a well-known risk factor for psoriasis. The researchers note that one weakness of the study is that stress resilience was only tested on one occasion, at the time of enlistment when the men were 18 years old.

"Stress can vary throughout life," adds Marta. "However, we have not had the opportunity to investigate these changes."

More information: M. Laskowski et al, Influence of stress resilience in adolescence on long‐term risk of psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis among men: A prospective register‐based cohort study in Sweden, Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (2024). DOI: 10.1111/jdv.20069

Citation: Low stress resilience is linked to increased risk of psoriasis (2024, May 21) retrieved 3 July 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-05-stress-resilience-linked-psoriasis.html
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