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Table of Contents
Terms Used In This Article
cytokine - a protein
created as part of an immune system response; acts as a messenger between
cells
morbidity - an
unhealthy consequence or complication
mortality - death
rate; death as a result of disease or treatment
Common Chiari Terms
cerebellar tonsils -
portion of the cerebellum located at the bottom, so named because of their
shape
cerebellum - part of
the brain located at the bottom of the skull, near the opening to the spinal
area; important for muscle control, movement, and balance
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) - clear liquid in the brain and spinal
cord, acts as a shock absorber
Chiari malformation I -
condition where the cerebellar tonsils are displaced out of the skull area
into the spinal area, causing compression of brain tissue and disruption of
CSF flow
decompression surgery -
general term used for any of several surgical techniques employed to
create more space around a Chiari malformation and to relieve compression
MRI - magnetic
resonance imaging; large device which uses strong magnetic fields to produce
images of soft tissue inside the human body
syringomyelia (SM)
- neurological condition where a fluid filled cyst forms in the spinal
cord
syrinx - fluid filled
cyst in the spinal cord
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February 20, 2006 -- For many people, marriage is the single most
important relationship in their life. So perhaps it's not surprising
that the benefits of a healthy marriage can extend beyond emotional
satisfaction to concrete physical benefits as well. When confronting
health issues such as cancer, heart disease, and surgery, married people
have consistently lower levels of morbidity and mortality.
There is a flip-side, however. While a strong
marriage imparts health benefits, a troubled, or unhappy, marriage can have
a strong negative impact. Unhappy marriages and marital discord have
been found to translate into a 10-25 times increase in the risk for
depressive symptoms and major depression respectively.
The effects range to the physical as well. One
study of women with coronary heart disease found that marital stress
worsened the prognosis by nearly three times for additional coronary
problems. Another study of patients with congestive heart failure
found that marital quality was as strong a predictor of their four year
survival as the severity of their disease was.
Laboratory studies have provided clues as to the
mechanisms linking marital strife and physical problems. Research has
shown that marital conflict can lead to a rise in blood pressure, have a
negative effect on the immune system, and increase the production of stress
related hormones for a sustained period of time.
Based on the previous research in this area, a
multi-disciplinary team, led by Dr. Kiecolt-Glaser at Ohio State University,
decided to examine the effects of hostile marital interactions on wound
healing. Specifically, they wanted to look at the impact of both short-term
marital conflict and chronic marital conflict by recruiting couples to spend
two separate 24-hour periods in their laboratory.
They found 42 couples willing to participate, ranging
in age from 22-77 years old. The couples were fairly well educated
with 40% having graduated from college and 26% with postgraduate education.
On average, they had been married for 12.5 years. To provide better
experimental controls, the researchers recruited only healthy couples who did not
smoke and did not drink excessive amounts of caffeine and alcohol.
At the start of each visit - which were separated by
about 2 months - a suction device was used to create a blister wound on each
person's forearm. The wound was then monitored daily using a widely
accepted protocol to assess healing. In addition, at several time
during the visit, fluid was removed from the blister in order to measure the
levels of various cytokines, products of the immune system which are
important to early healing.
The first visit was structured such that the partners
participated in a social support interaction. Each spouse was asked to
talk about something they wanted to change about themselves, while their
partners were instructed to be involved in the discussion as they saw fit.
When one spouse was finished, the couple was instructed to reverse roles.
At the end of the session, they were asked to tell the story of their
relationship for 30 minutes.
In contrast, the second visit was designed to focus on
marital conflicts. During this session, an interviewer first spoke
with the couples for 10-20 minutes to identify areas of conflict in their
marriage. The couples were then asked to discuss, and try to resolve,
1-2 of these areas which the interviewer thought would produce the MOST
conflict, such as money, communications, extended family, etc.
During both sessions, the researchers used a coding
method called the Rapid Marital Interaction Coding System (RMICS) to
identify and record both positive and negative (or hostile) interactions
between the couples. Negative actions included such things as
contempt, disgust, belligerence, verbal and non-verbal threatening, distress
maintaining actions, criticism, hostile tone, and eye rolling.
Positive interactions were things such as acceptance, relationship enhancing
attributions, self-disclosure, humor, and constructive problem solving.
While the actions of each individual partner were coded, the
scores for each couple were combined. Couples who scored above the
group average at both sessions were considered to be high-hostility couples.
The rest of the couples were considered to be low-hostility.
Using this method, 28% of the couples were categorized
as high-hostility. Interestingly, there was no significant difference
between the high and low hostility groups in regards to age, education, or
even length of marriage. Not surprisingly, however, the high-hostility
couples reported significantly lower marital satisfaction than the
low-hostility group. There were also differences between the sexes
when it came to hostile behaviors. While the men in high-hostility
couples displayed only a small difference in behavior from the men in
low-hostility couples, there was a much larger gap in the behavior of the
women in the two groups.
When it came to wound healing, the researchers found,
and reported in the December, 2005 issue of the Archives of General
Psychiatry, that both the short-term impact of the structured sessions and
the long-term impact of hostility in a marriage had a significant effect on
the wound healing (see Figure 1). Specifically, on average, couples
took a full day longer to heal after the marital
conflict discussion as opposed to the structured support session. In
addition to this effect, couples that were categorized as high hostility
took a day longer to heal - at both sessions - than the low hostility
couples. In fact, the high hostility couples healed at only 60% of the
rate of their counterparts.
The microscope revealed similar findings. Both
the types of session and the high/low hostility had a significant impact on
the production of cytokines at the wound site, which likely delayed healing.
The research is clear; marriage can have a powerful
effect on not only people's mental and emotional health, but their physical
health as well. Recovering from Chiari surgery and dealing with its
physical aftermath can challenge the strongest among us, and this study
suggests that having a strong partner can make all the difference in the
world.
--Rick Labuda
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Key Points
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In general marriage is the most
important relationship people have; married people tend to have less
morbidity and mortality
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However, unhappy marriages can be a
source of tremendous stress and contribute to negative health outcomes
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Stress - like that from a hostile
relationship - has been shown to increase blood pressure and negatively
affect the immune system
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Study looked at wound healing among
couples
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Compared healing of high-hostility
couples to low-hostility couples
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Also compared healing after a
supportive marital interaction to healing after a marital conflict
interaction
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Found people healed more slowly
after the conflict interaction than after the support interaction
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Also found that high-hostility
couples healed at 60% of the rate of low-hostility couples
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Analyzing the wound sites showed
that the hostile interactions affected the body's production of critical
cytokines
Figure 1
Average Wound Healing Time In Days
| Group |
Social Support Visit |
Marital Conflict Visit |
| High-hostility |
6 |
7 |
| Low-hostility |
5 |
6 |
Notes: There was a one day effect on healing from both the type
of visit (support vs conflict) and the type of marriage (high hostile vs low
hostile) Source:
Kiecolt-Glaser JK, Loving TJ, Stowell JR, Malarkey WB, Lemeshow S, Dickinson
SL, Glaser R.
Hostile marital interactions, proinflammatory cytokine production, and wound
healing. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2005 Dec;62(12):1377-84.
Related C&S News Articles:
Spouses Disagree On Level Of Pain & Disability
How Chronic Illness Affects Partners
Disease, Disability & Marriage
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