Abstract

Stress is a central concept in biology and has now been widely used in psychological, physiological, social, and even environmental fields. However, the concept of stress was cross-utilized to refer to different elements of the stress system including stressful stimulus, stressor, stress response, and stress effect. Here, we summarized the evolution of the concept of stress and the framework of the stress system. We find although the concept of stress is developed from Selye's “general adaptation syndrome”, it has now expanded and evolved significantly. Stress is now defined as a state of homeostasis being challenged, including both system stress and local stress. A specific stressor may potentially bring about specific local stress, while the intensity of stress beyond a threshold may commonly activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and result in a systematic stress response. The framework of the stress system indicates that stress includes three types: sustress (inadequate stress), eustress (good stress), and distress (bad stress). Both sustress and distress might impair normal physiological functions and even lead to pathological conditions, while eustress might benefit health through hormesis-induced optimization of homeostasis. Therefore, an optimal stress level is essential for building biological shields to guarantee normal life processes.

Highlights

  • Over the past decades, the concepts of stress have evolved and expanded significantly

  • We find the concept of stress is developed from Selye’s “general adaptation syndrome”, it has expanded and evolved significantly

  • Oxidative stress refers to a disruption of redox signaling and control [6, 7], and endoplasmic reticulum stress refers to the stress induced by the accumulation of unfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum [8]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The concepts of stress have evolved and expanded significantly. This paper will first construct the basic framework of the stress system, and summarize the key developments that have contributed to shaping the framework. Through this way, we hope the mature framework of the stress system will help to integrate stressrelated concepts from disparate fields of science and medicine, and allow the concept of stress to be common across different fields. We suggest the framework of the stress system should comprise five basic elements: stressful stimulus, stressor, stress, stress response, and stress effect (Figure 1A). The stressful stimulus is the starting point, the effect is the end point, and stressor, stress, and stress response are cascades

Evolution of stress concept and stress system
ER stress
CWI stress
Emotional Cognitive Perceptual Psychosocial
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