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John Cacioppo on Loneliness and the Body New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Individuals may experience physical manifestations of their loneliness, says John Cacioppo. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- John T. Cacioppo: John T. Cacioppo is the Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor at The University of Chicago, the Director of the University of Chicago Center for Cognitive and Social Neuroscience, and the Director of the Arete Initiative at the University of Chicago. He is the author of Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need for Social Connection. Professor Cacioppo is a Big Think Delphi Fellow. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TRANSCRIPT: Question: What are the physiological effects of loneliness? Cacioppo: Among the physiological effects of loneliness that we and others have documented are increased vascular resistance, which is increased resistance of blood flow circulating throughout your body. That increased vascular resistance we see not only when people confront stressers but even at baseline, when just sitting normally during the course of a day. In one study, in fact, we put small, ambulatory devices on people and they walk around and [were beeped] and sat down and pressed some buttons and we were able to measure vascular resistance and blood pressure, and found in those individuals, during the course, the lonelier they were, the higher the vascular resistance, just as they walk around in their everyday life or sat in a chair during the course of a day. Over time, vascular resistance in other studies [this has] been associated with the increased blood pressure. We too find, both in cross sectional and longitudinal studies, that loneliness in middle age and older adults, when homeostatic mechanisms like blood pressure regulation start to degrade, loneliness is associated with higher levels of blood pressure. We find, in the morning, stress hormones, cortisol in particular, rise. When you’re sleeping, you don’t need a lot of the stress hormones to promote energy. During the day, you do. You see this big surge when you awaken. Lonely individuals show larger increases in cortisol in the morning than non lonely individuals. That’s been shown cross sectionally, what we did was to look longitudinally. We took individuals and measured their loneliness in the evening and then measured the morning rise the next morning, and we found, even longitudinally, the lonelier they were the night before, the higher the morning rise in stress cortisol the next day, which was a very interesting result that suggested something about loneliness, not some other individual difference it’s contributing. Cortisol is a very powerful hormone, and not only does it help metabolize fats and sugars to give you energy, but it also controls inflammation, and it operates on that at the intracellular level. Cells and the immune system have receptors for cortisol, and those receptors, when cortisol strikes those receptors on these cells, sends a chemical signal to the nucleus of the cell. In the nucleus of the cell, there’s other chemical signals being produced by the DNA called RNA transcripts that travel out to the surface of the cell and then control inflammation throughout the body. What we found in collaboration with Steve Cole at UCLA was that the cortisol receptors were down regulated in lonely individuals. This chemical signal from that receptor to the nucleus was muted somewhat. That’s probably because of these higher levels of cortisol, these receptors adapt just like you do when you go outside in the bright sunshine, your eyes start to adapt. You get used to that higher level. So, the signaling is reduced. Well, as a result of that reduced signaling of cortisol to the nucleus of the cell, the DNA to RNA transcription itself was impacted, so the signal of inflammation was less constrained, the cortisol is less… it’s less constrained and there was more inflammatory signaling coming out of the nucleus of the cell. So that was an intracellular process. Not too surprisingly, in light of that finding, loneliness has been associated with decreased immunity. There’s other effects, such as loneliness being associated with faster progression of Alzheimer’s Disease, and loneliness, of course, is associated with poorer health outcomes. Question: Is loneliness recognized by the medical world? Cacioppo: Doctors have underestimated the importance of loneliness. We have characterized individuals as rugged individualists. Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/john-caci...