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Acute Active, but not Passive, Psychological Stress Increases non-classical Monocyte Proportions.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Psychological stress exposure is a modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), possibly through promoting a heightened inflammatory milieu. Under psychological stress, changes in monocyte subsets from classical (CM) to intermediate (IM) and non-classical (NCM) could indicate a more pro-inflammatory environment. We investigated the impact of acute psychological stress (active and passive) on monocyte subsets and leukocyte count ratios. METHODS: Twenty-four participants completed a 20-min baseline period, followed by a passive (International Affective Picture System: IAPS) and active stress task (socially evaluative Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test: PASAT) with 90-min recovery after each task. Blood samples were collected to determine changes in: CM, IM and NCM count/proportions, systemic inflammation response index (SIRI) and neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio (NLR). RESULTS: CM proportions decreased (89.4% to 87.0%; P=0.007) and NCM proportions increased (6.8% to 2.1%; P=0.035) from baseline to immediately post-PASAT. There were no differences in monocyte subsets from baseline to post-IAPS (CM% P>0.99; IM% P=>0.99; NCM% P>0.99). NLR and SIRI did not differ from baseline in response to either the PASAT or IAPS (P>0.05). CONCLUSION: Acute active, but not passive, psychological stress promoted a transition in monocyte subsets towards a more pro-inflammatory environment, which may be an important advancement in markers used to assess the inflammatory response to acute psychological stress.

Authors: Linsley VG, Bishop NC, Roberts MJ, Paine NJ,
Journal: Biopsychosoc Sci Med;2025 Sep 1;87(7):445-452. doi:10.1097/PSY.0000000000001416
Year: 2025
PubMed: PMID: 40608759 (Go to PubMed)