TY - JOUR
T1 - Sensitization to early life stress and response to chemical odors in older adults
AU - Bell, Iris R.
AU - Schwartz, Gary E.
AU - Amend, Diane
AU - Peterson, Julie M.
AU - Stini, William A.
N1 - Funding Information:
From the Departments of Psychiatry (IRB, GES, IMP), Psychology (GES, DA, IRB), Neurology (GE!%, and Anthropology (WAS), University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ. Address reprint nquests to Dr. Iris Bell at the Department of Psychiatry, Tucson Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 3601 South 6th Avenue, MS I I NH, Tucson, AZ 85723. Supported in part by a grant from BRSG 2SO7 RR0567523 and from the Ontario Ministry of Health (Ontario. Canada). Received June 7.1993; revised November 30.1993.
PY - 1994/6/1
Y1 - 1994/6/1
N2 - This study examined the hypothesis that older persons who currently report illness from environmental chemical odors (cacosmia) may have experienced higher levels of stress early in life than did noncacosmic controls. The hypothesis derives from a time-dependent sensitization (TDS) model for cacosmia (Bell et al 1992) that predicts a relative interchangeability of stress and chemicals in inducing and eliciting sensitized responses in vulnerable individuals. Subjects were selected from those in the top 24% (cacosmic) and bottom 27% (noncacosmic) of a sample of 192 older adults (mean age 73.8 years) for self-reported frequency of illness from the odors of pesticide, car exhaust, paint, perfume, and new carpet. As in previous investigations, cacosmics were younger, more depressed, and more shy; cacosmics also included a higher proportion of women (83% versus 61%). As predicted, cacosmics rated themselves higher in stress for the first four decades of their lives, but not the recent past or present, even after controlling for depression, anxiety, hostility, shyness, age, and gender. Cacosmics reported increased prevalence of physician-diagnosed nasal allergies, breast cysts, hypothyroidism, sinusitis, food sensitivities, irritable bowel, and migraine headache. Only 4% of the overall sample (including 9% of the cacosmics) acknowledged the controversial physician diagnosis of "chemical sensitivity." The replicated observation of greater shyness in cacosmics is consistent with the ability of hyperreactivity to novelty to predict enhanced susceptibility to TDS from low levels of pharmacological agents in animals. The findings support a TDS model for cacosmia and suggest that cacosmia as a symptom identifies a large subset of the nonindustrial population with significant psychophysiological health problems that merit further objective examination.
AB - This study examined the hypothesis that older persons who currently report illness from environmental chemical odors (cacosmia) may have experienced higher levels of stress early in life than did noncacosmic controls. The hypothesis derives from a time-dependent sensitization (TDS) model for cacosmia (Bell et al 1992) that predicts a relative interchangeability of stress and chemicals in inducing and eliciting sensitized responses in vulnerable individuals. Subjects were selected from those in the top 24% (cacosmic) and bottom 27% (noncacosmic) of a sample of 192 older adults (mean age 73.8 years) for self-reported frequency of illness from the odors of pesticide, car exhaust, paint, perfume, and new carpet. As in previous investigations, cacosmics were younger, more depressed, and more shy; cacosmics also included a higher proportion of women (83% versus 61%). As predicted, cacosmics rated themselves higher in stress for the first four decades of their lives, but not the recent past or present, even after controlling for depression, anxiety, hostility, shyness, age, and gender. Cacosmics reported increased prevalence of physician-diagnosed nasal allergies, breast cysts, hypothyroidism, sinusitis, food sensitivities, irritable bowel, and migraine headache. Only 4% of the overall sample (including 9% of the cacosmics) acknowledged the controversial physician diagnosis of "chemical sensitivity." The replicated observation of greater shyness in cacosmics is consistent with the ability of hyperreactivity to novelty to predict enhanced susceptibility to TDS from low levels of pharmacological agents in animals. The findings support a TDS model for cacosmia and suggest that cacosmia as a symptom identifies a large subset of the nonindustrial population with significant psychophysiological health problems that merit further objective examination.
KW - Chemical sensitivity
KW - cacosmia
KW - shyness
KW - stress
KW - time-dependent sensitization
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U2 - 10.1016/0006-3223(94)90021-3
DO - 10.1016/0006-3223(94)90021-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 8054408
AN - SCOPUS:0028304126
SN - 0006-3223
VL - 35
SP - 857
EP - 863
JO - Biological Psychiatry
JF - Biological Psychiatry
IS - 11
ER -