Exhausted? Feeling really tired can threaten your health

October 22, 2010 By Julie Deardorff

For many of us, exhaustion is a fact of life. But for the rich and famous, it seems acute weariness can be so debilitating that it requires hospitalization and, in the case of Chicago Symphony Orchestra music director Riccardo Muti, a monthlong rest along Italy's Adriatic coast.

Though eyes often roll when celebrities vanish to be treated for "exhaustion," experts say it can be a valid medical condition, even for those who don't have a publicist. Prolonged periods of physical stress and can cause problems that shouldn't be ignored, they say, though Americans may not want to admit it.

"Exhaustion is real on many levels, but it's not part of our medical lexicon," said Dr. John Stracks, a mind-body specialist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital's Center for Integrative Medicine who treats chronic pain. "So when you hear about Muti (being prescribed rest), it seems like a spoof, which speaks to how jaded and hard-driving we are these days."

Americans have more sleep loss and longer work schedules than residents of most other industrialized countries, and both factors can lead to physical and emotional collapse, said Dr. Eve Van Cauter, a sleep researcher and professor of medicine at the University of Chicago.

Experts say can trigger a cascade of -- in particular, the gastrointestinal distress suffered by Muti. The condition is frequently seen in night or shift workers, a description that, in some ways, applies to the maestro.

"Your mood and your gut function are intimately tied together," said Dr. Gerard Mullin, a gastroenterologist and associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

When you're stressed, for example, the body's "flight or fight" response causes a surge in adrenaline, which can result in valves in the upper digestive tract staying open. When this happens, food and digestive enzymes can travel the wrong way, resulting in reflux, heartburn and other stomach problems, Mullin said.

Sleep loss and fatigue also lead to problems with people's circadian rhythm, which can promote inflammation throughout the body and cause gastrointestinal issues, Van Cauter added.

In some cases, fatigue is a sign of an underlying disease, including cancer, low thyroid, anemia or other metabolic abnormalities, such as adrenal insufficiency. Exhaustion is commonly seen with depression and is a possible side effect of many prescription drugs, including beta blockers, muscle relaxants and mood stabilizers.

But University of Chicago Medical Center internist Dr. Alex Lickerman said fatigue caused by dehydration, infection, drug or alcohol abuse, or lack of sleep -- either due to insomnia or just burning the candle at both ends -- is treatable in the outpatient realm. Lickerman has yet to admit anyone to the hospital for being tired.

"It's a symptom," he said.

Of course, dozens of celebrities -- from hip-hop star Wyclef Jean to actress Lindsay Lohan -- have been carted off to the hospital amid reports of exhaustion. Though the term is a common euphemism for "drug or alcohol addiction" or a mental illness such as depression, performers also can suffer physical effects from their frenetic lifestyle and the harsh glare of the spotlight.

"It is a legitimate diagnosis when exhaustion causes someone to collapse and be unable to function," said Los Angeles-based psychiatrist Judith Orloff, who frequently treats exhausted celebs. "Exhaustion can also lead to low serotonin, which causes depression, anxiety and insomnia. But it's not accurate if the real diagnosis is drug or alcohol intoxication or overdose."

Exhaustion, by any name, is hardly a new phenomenon. In the 1800s, women were said to suffer from hystero-neurasthenia, or "nervous exhaustion." Triggers included excessive amounts of exercise, cohabitation, brain work and worries over motherhood, according to an 1887 article in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Women were also at risk if they worried too much about "impending or actual misfortune."

In the 1950s, around the time women were having "nervous breakdowns," scientists published research showing that it was, indeed, possible for business executives to suffer from exhaustion. Today the term burnout, which is characterized by emotional exhaustion, is recognized in Europe and is a common concern among those who work in the medical or humanitarian aid fields.

Still, while the World Health Organization recognizes several forms of medical exhaustion due to heat, pregnancy, excessive exertion, combat, malaise and other conditions, the U.S. government has not given it a diagnostic code.

Some data suggest "vital exhaustion," or a state of excessive fatigue, irritability and hopelessness, can be a risk factor for heart attacks and death. Dutch researchers found that people with high vital exhaustion scores were three times as likely to suffer a subsequent heart attack, perhaps because it increases blood clotting.

In the U.S., a problem is that the main treatment for exhaustion -- sleep -- is often seen as laziness, a bother or a barrier to productivity. In 1960, the average American received a luxurious amount of shut-eye: 8 1/2 hours a night. Today, most people get by on an average of less than seven hours, and a substantial proportion sleep less than six hours, according to National Sleep Foundation data

Stracks says he believes investing in rest for the chronically tuckered-out could have a large payoff down the road. "Would a two-week break really cost that much more than another MRI or ER visit?" he asked.

He recently prescribed several doses of sleep and relaxation for Chicago's Kat Ryan, who made her way to his office two weeks ago feeling dizzy and complaining that she "couldn't get her head on straight."

Ryan, a new mother, said she has been by her pregnancy and by getting up every two hours for the first six weeks of daughter Zoe's life.

"It had been building for months," Ryan said. "I was a little dehydrated, I wasn't eating well, I was tired, I was going back to work (after six weeks) and the combination was causing the dizziness."

Ryan, the artistic administrator for the Chicago Jazz Ensemble, spent the weekend sleeping; her daughter's father cared for their infant.

"I now know what stress can do to your body," said Ryan, who still has residual dizziness if she doesn't get enough sleep or eats poorly. "But Dr. Stracks was dead-on. On days that I do get rest -- which are few and far between -- I feel fine."

FOUR WAYS TO FIGHT EXHAUSTION

Exercise. Once you have enough energy to stand, get moving. Exercise can especially help if the exhaustion is related to depression.

Take meditation mini breaks. If you're wired all day, you'll have trouble calming down at night and getting to sleep. The short breaks "will help you decompress, calm your mind and relax," said Judith Orloff, an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of California at Los Angeles and the author of "Positive Energy." "Take a few deep breaths to relax the body," she said. "Focus on a positive image such as a sunset, a flower, a child's face. Stay focused on the positive image, breathe and relax. This will keep you in a centered place so you are not frazzled."

Stay present. Worrying is exhausting. "Do not project into the future or catastrophize," Orloff said. "Take doable action steps to solve problems."

Nip it in the bud. Before things get too bad, prescribe yourself some rest. Manhattan's Lisa Zaslow, 46, recently decided to put her work on hold and spend a month in the remote town of Marfa, Texas, to recharge emotionally and reflect on her life. "My business is about helping people create time and space, and I needed to do that for myself," said Zaslow, owner of Gotham Organizers, who has been in Marfa a week so far.

(c) 2010, Chicago Tribune.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Filter


Move the slider to adjust rank threshold, so that you can hide some of the comments.


Display comments: newest first

Flakk
Oct 22, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
Americans have more sleep loss and longer work schedules than residents of most other industrialized countries


Some how that doesn't surprise me. I went to bed last night at 0130 and woke up at 0500.
CarolinaScotsman
Oct 22, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
Of course the working poor who work 80 to 100 hours a week to support a family and have no insurance or savings are just "slackers" when they suffer exhaustion. If you don't have the money to take time off, your just up the creek and no one gives a crap. Only the well to do can afford "exhaustion", the rest of us just have heart attacks in our thirties and forties and die before we reach retirement age.
Quantum_Conundrum
Oct 23, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
Of course the working poor who work 80 to 100 hours a week to support a family and have no insurance or savings are just "slackers" when they suffer exhaustion. If you don't have the money to take time off, your just up the creek and no one gives a crap. Only the well to do can afford "exhaustion", the rest of us just have heart attacks in our thirties and forties and die before we reach retirement age.


Pretty much.

Whoever wrote this article, along with this "Lisa Zaslow", has obviously had a sheltered life. A one month break at one's own leisure is completely unheard of for certainly anyone below the mean income level, and taking breaks at work tends to get you fired.

Then there's that whole thing where it's impossible to get money to start your own business unless you are an immigrant, or unless you or your parents are already rich...in which case you don't need money anyway.
VOR
Oct 30, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
yes the american work culture still overworks and undervalues people. It doesnt seem to have gotten any better. Its true many employers are inflexible about extended unpaid leaves, but its not that they have to be that way. We also have relatively short vacation times compared to many countries. If you want this to continue, be sure to think/vote conservative. everyman for himself! screw the workers! This will continue until we stand up and stop tolerating the assinine arguement that we have overwork people in order to compete. That is as old as dirt and complete BS.
Its ingrained into everyone. So we also have to remember for ourselves that working too hard is counterproductive. Just about anyone can save for time off if allowed. It may sound calous but saving can and should be acheived regardless of income level.
Rank 5 /5 (3 votes)
Relevant PhysicsForums posts

More news stories

From stem cell to brain cell - new technique mimics the brain

A new technique that converts stem cells into brain cells has been developed by researchers at Lund University. The method is simpler, quicker and safer than previous research has shown and opens the doors to a shorter route ...

Medicine & Health / Medical research

created 17 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

The search for the earliest signs of Alzheimer's

(Medical Xpress) -- For the past five years, volunteers from the City of Berkeley and surrounding areas have come to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to participate in an ongoing study that’s changing ...

Medicine & Health / Alzheimer's disease & dementia

created 1 hour ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0 | with audio podcast

Who pays for personalized medicine?

While researchers are busy identifying new biomarkers to detect disease and tailor treatments to individual needs, legal battles have been waged all the way up to the Supreme Court, trying to sort out whether a private company ...

Medicine & Health / Health

created 1 hour ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

No new neurons in the human olfactory bulb

(Medical Xpress) -- Research from Karolinska Institutet shows that the human olfactory bulb - a structure in the brain that processes sensory input from the nose - differs from that of other mammals in that no new neurons ...

Medicine & Health / Neuroscience

created 4 hours ago | popularity 4.5 / 5 (4) | comments 0 | with audio podcast

Lifting barriers to nutrition

(Medical Xpress) -- A University of Alberta study has revealed challenges that schools are working through, to adopt healthier food choices for their students in an effort to meet government guidelines for ...

Medicine & Health / Health

created 1 hour ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0


Is a classical electrodynamics law incompatible with special relativity?

(Phys.org) -- The laws of classical electromagnetism that were developed in the 19th century are the same laws that scientists use today. They include Maxwell’s four equations along with the Lorentz la ...

Robot monitors toxic red tides

A robotic device suspended under the ocean surface from a buoy off the New Hampshire coast is monitoring seawater for evidence of the red tide, clusters of microscopic plants that release toxins into fish ...

Pair call for public discourse on treating wastewater contaminated with birth control pill chemicals

(Phys.org) -- As people go about their daily lives, it’s easy to overlook the impact their lifestyle has on the environment. Resources are used and as a result of their use, certain elements are placed ...

Researchers find a way to delay aging of stem cells

Stem cells are essential building blocks for all organisms, from plants to humans. They can divide and renew themselves throughout life, differentiating into the specialized tissues needed during development, ...

Robotics: Gesturing for control

New intelligent algorithms could help robots to quickly recognize and respond to human gestures. Researchers at A*STAR Institute for Infocomm Research in Singapore have created a computer program which recognises ...

Real-time monitoring of RNA splicing in living cells moves step closer with novel fluorescent probe

Numerous biological processes depend on molecules called lariat RNAs (LaRNAs). These lasso-shaped structures form in the cell during RNA splicing. During this process, transcribed RNA strands convert to messenger ...