1. "Allostasis" and "allostatic load"
Peter Sterling and Joseph Eyer (1988) introduced "Allostasis": "maintaining stability through change". Classic "homeostasis" means "maintaining constancy"; allostasis means "adapting to change". Example: shivering and heat production when cold is homeostasis (maintaining body temperature); morning cortisol rise and elevated heart rate preparing for activity is allostasis (pre-adapting to anticipated activity).
Bruce McEwen (Rockefeller) added "allostatic load" in 1993: the cumulative cost to the body when adaptation becomes "overloaded, chronic, unpredictable". 4 patterns:
- Frequent stress responses (repeated activation)
- Failed adaptation (no habituation to repeated stimuli)
- Failed recovery (no return to baseline after stress)
- Inadequate response (activation without threat)
2. 8 measurable biomarkers
Seeman, Singer, Rowe et al. (2001) MacArthur longitudinal study's allostatic-load indicators (1 point each if in the "top 25%"; total 0–8):
| Indicator | Measure | Risk threshold |
|---|---|---|
| ① Cortisol | 12-hour urine | High (chronic HPA activation) |
| ② DHEA-S | Serum | Low (stress-protective hormone) |
| ③ Norepinephrine | 12-hour urine | High (sympathetic) |
| ④ Epinephrine | 12-hour urine | High (sympathetic) |
| ⑤ Fasting glucose / insulin / HbA1c | Blood | High (metabolic burden) |
| ⑥ Cholesterol / HDL ratio | Blood | High (lipid burden) |
| ⑦ Blood pressure (sys / dia) | Measurement | High (cardiovascular burden) |
| ⑧ Waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) | Measurement | High (abdominal obesity, insulin resistance) |
3–4+ = high allostatic load. In elderly longitudinal studies, this is a strong predictor of mortality and cognitive decline.
3. Clinical impact — integrated mechanism
| Disease | Effect of allostatic load |
|---|---|
| Cardiovascular | Hypertension, atherosclerosis, MI, stroke |
| Diabetes | Type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance |
| Obesity | Abdominal obesity, metabolic syndrome |
| Immunity | Immune suppression, autoimmunity, chronic inflammation |
| Dementia | Hippocampal atrophy, cognitive decline (#254) |
| Depression / anxiety | Amygdala hyperactivity, prefrontal atrophy |
| Osteoporosis | Cortisol ↑ → bone loss |
| Gut (IBS) | Gut–brain axis damage |
4. Karlamangla 2002 longitudinal
1,200 elderly people, 7-year follow-up — allostatic-load score vs mortality:
| Allostatic-load score | 7-year mortality |
|---|---|
| 0–1 (low) | 10% |
| 2–3 (mid) | 22% |
| 4+ (high) | 35% |
Significant even after adjusting for smoking, weight, and pre-existing conditions. A 1-point rise = +30% mortality risk.
5. The medical cost of Korea's high-stress society
- Korea OECD #5 for working hours (#226)
- OECD #1 suicide rate for 22 years
- Hypertension 30%, diabetes 14%, dyslipidemia 21%
- Dementia 1 million; projected 3 million by 2050 (#254)
- 20s–30s depression diagnoses doubled over 5 years
Allostatic-load view: all these statistics are different expressions of the same mechanism (cumulative chronic stress).
6. 5-axis recovery system
5 areas with clinical evidence for reducing allostatic load:
1. Sleep (7–9h)
- Cortisol falls and immune / memory consolidation during sleep
- Chronic ≤5h adds +1 to allostatic-load score
- CBT-I (#225) outperforms medication
2. Exercise (150 min/week moderate)
- Cortisol, insulin, BP, cholesterol, WHR all improve
- Long-term allostatic-load score average -2
- Aerobic + strength integrated is best
3. Relationships (social support)
- Oxytocin ↑, cortisol ↓ (Heinrichs 2003)
- Securely attached groups have lower allostatic load (#259)
- 1–2 deep relationships outperform 100 weak ones
4. Diet (Mediterranean)
- Omega-3, fruits / vegetables, whole grains, olive oil
- Less sugar, refined carbs, trans fats
- Improves insulin, cholesterol, inflammation markers
5. Rest (recovery rituals)
- 30+ minutes of daily "parasympathetic activation" (forest #232, meditation #191, yoga)
- One full rest day on weekends
- 1–2 vacations of 1+ week per year
- Mindfulness's (#191) cortisol-lowering effect
7. Additional neuroscience
The hippocampus (memory, emotion regulation) is most vulnerable to chronic cortisol. McEwen: chronic stress → hippocampal neuron loss → depression / memory ↓ → more stress (vicious cycle). But "neuroplasticity" allows recovery — the 5 axes above promote hippocampal regeneration (BDNF ↑).
8. Integration into medical checkups
Current Korean health checkups cover only single indicators (BP, diabetes, cholesterol). Some US / European clinics recommend integrating an allostatic-load score:
- 8 indicators combined → single "allostatic-load score"
- 3+ → active lifestyle intervention
- 5+ → integrated mental-health / cardiovascular / endocrine assessment
- Recommended joint care with psychiatry and internal medicine
9. Korean self-assessment
- In the past year, do you sleep less than 7 hours nightly? (Y/N)
- Exercise less than 150 min/week? (Y/N)
- Loneliness score 5/10 or more? (Y/N)
- Processed food / dining out / sugar 50%+ of intake? (Y/N)
- Rest / hobby time less than 30 min/day? (Y/N)
- Blood pressure 130/85 or more? (Y/N)
- HbA1c 5.7 or more? (Y/N)
- Waist-to-hip ratio ≥0.9 (men) / 0.85 (women)? (Y/N)
3+ Y = suspect high allostatic load — lifestyle + medical checkup.
10. Korean resources
- Integrated checkup at university-hospital endocrinology / cardiology / psychiatry
- "The End of Stress as We Know It" (McEwen, Korean edition)
- "Comprehensive stress assessment" at some Korean integrative-medicine clinics
- For high load: medication (BP, diabetes) + lifestyle + psychiatry integrated