Posted by: Anthony
Reinglas
Written by
Dr. Mercola
Your
adrenal glands are each no bigger than a walnut and
weigh less than a grape, yet are responsible for one
of the most important functions in your body:
managing stress.
“The adrenals are
known as ‘the glands of stress,’” writes James
Wilson in his book Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st
Century Stress Syndrome. “It is their job to
enable your body to deal with stress from every
possible source, ranging from injury and disease to
work and relationship problems. Your resiliency,
energy, endurance and your very life all depend on
their proper functioning.”[1]
When your adrenal
glands are fatigued, a condition known as adrenal
fatigue or adrenal exhaustion, your entire body
feels it and suffers from extreme exhaustion as
well.
It’s estimated that
up to 80 percent of adults experience adrenal
fatigue during their lifetimes, yet it remains one
of the most under-diagnosed illnesses in the United
States.[2]
The Optimal Function of
Your Adrenal Glands
Your body has two
adrenal glands, located just above each of your
kidneys. As part of your endocrine system, your
adrenal glands secrete more than 50 hormones, many
of which are essential for life and include:
-
Glucocorticoids. These hormones, which
include cortisol, help your body convert food into
energy, normalize blood sugar, respond to stress
and maintain your immune system’s inflammatory
response.
-
Mineralocorticoids. These hormones, which
include aldosterone, help keep your blood pressure
and blood volume normal by maintaining a proper
balance of sodium, potassium and water in your
body.[3]
-
Adrenaline. This hormone increases your
heart rate and controls blood flow to your muscles
and brain, along with helping with the conversion
of glycogen to glucose in your liver.
Together, these
hormones and others produced by your adrenal glands
control such body functions as:[4]
- Maintaining
metabolic processes, such as managing blood sugar
levels and regulating inflammation
- Regulating your
body’s balance of salt and water
- Controlling your
"fight or flight" response to stress
- Maintaining
pregnancy
- Initiating and
controlling sexual maturation during childhood and
puberty
- Producing sex
steroids such as estrogen and testosterone
Ironically, although
your adrenal glands are there, in large part, to
help you cope with stress, too much of it is
actually what causes their function to break down.
In other words, one
of your adrenal glands most important tasks is to
get your body ready for the “fight or flight” stress
response, which means increasing adrenaline and
other hormones.
As part of this
response, your heart rate and blood pressure
increase, your digestion slows, and your body
becomes ready to face a potential threat or
challenge.
While this response
is necessary and good when it's needed, many of us
are constantly faced with stressors (work,
environmental toxins, not enough sleep, worry,
relationship problems and more) and therefore are in
this "fight or flight" mode for far too long -- much
longer than was ever intended from a biological
standpoint.
The result is that
your adrenal glands, faced with excessive stress and
burden, become overworked and fatigued. Some common
factors that put excess stress on your adrenals are:[5]
- Anger, fear,
anxiety, guilt, depression and other negative
emotions
- Overwork,
including physical or mental strain
- Excessive exercise
- Sleep deprivation
- Light-cycle
disruption (such as working the night shift or
often going to sleep late)
- Surgery, trauma or
injury
- Chronic
inflammation, infection, illness or pain
- Temperature
extremes
- Toxic exposure
- Nutritional
deficiencies and/or severe allergies
Signs and Symptoms of
Adrenal Fatigue
When your adrenal
glands become depleted, it leads to a decrease in
certain hormone levels, particularly cortisol. The
deficiencies in certain adrenal hormones will vary
with each case, ranging from mild to severe.
In its most extreme
form, this is referred to as Addison’s disease, a
condition that causes muscle weakness, weight loss,
low blood pressure and low blood sugar, and can be
life threatening.
Fortunately, only
about four persons per 100,000 develop Addison’s
disease, which is due to autoimmune disease in most
cases but can also develop after very severe stress.[6]
At the other end of
the spectrum, as well as in between, lies adrenal
fatigue (also known as hypoadrenia). Though the
symptoms are less severe than in Addison’s disease,
symptoms of adrenal fatigue can be debilitating. As
Wilson writes:
“Non-Addison’s
hypoadrenia (adrenal fatigue) is not usually
severe enough to be featured on TV or to be
considered a medical emergency. In fact, modern
medicine does not even recognize it as a distinct
syndrome. Nevertheless, it can wreak havoc with
your life.
In the more
serious cases of adrenal fatigue, the activity of
the adrenal glands is so diminished that the
person may have difficulty getting out of bed for
more than a few hours per day. With each increment
of reduction in adrenal function, every organ and
system in your body is more profoundly affected.”[7]
Classic signs and
symptoms of adrenal fatigue include:
- Fatigue and
weakness, especially in the morning and afternoon
- A suppressed
immune system
- Increased
allergies
- Muscle and bone
loss and muscular weakness
- Depression
- Cravings for foods
high in salt, sugar or fat
- Hormonal imbalance
- Skin problems
- Autoimmune
disorders
- Increased PMS or
menopausal symptoms
- Low sex drive
- Lightheadedness
when getting up from sitting or lying down
- Decreased ability
to handle stress
- Trouble waking up
in the morning, despite a full night’s sleep
- Poor memory
Additionally, people
with adrenal fatigue often get a burst of energy
around 6 p.m., followed by sleepiness at 9 p.m. or
10 p.m., which is often resisted. A “second wind” at
11 p.m. is then common, which often may keep you
from falling asleep until 1 a.m.[8]
Further, those with
adrenal fatigue often also have abnormal blood sugar
levels and mental disturbances, such as increased
fears and anxiety, and rely on coffee, soda and
other forms of caffeine to keep them going.
As the names implies,
the most common symptom of adrenal fatigue is
unrelenting fatigue, a feeling of being run down or
not able to keep up with your daily demands. And
because fatigue is such a common symptom, the
syndrome is very often missed or misdiagnosed by
physicians.
The Common Medical Test
for Adrenal Function Cannot Diagnose Adrenal Fatigue
Adding to the problem
of misdiagnosis is the fact that doctors typically
use an ACTH (adrenocorticotropic hormone) test to
check for problems with your adrenal glands.
However, the test only recognizes extreme
underproduction or overproduction of hormone levels,
as shown by the top and bottom 2 percent of a bell
curve.
Symptoms of adrenal
malfunction, meanwhile, occur after 15 percent of
the mean on both sides of the curve. So your adrenal
glands could be functioning 20 percent below the
mean, and your body experiencing symptoms of adrenal
fatigue, and the standard test won’t recognize it.[9]
The test that
will recognize adrenal fatigue, in all of its
stages, is a salivary cortisol test. This is an
inexpensive test you can purchase online and do at
home, as no prescription is needed. However, if you
suspect you have adrenal fatigue a knowledgeable
natural health care provider can help you with
diagnosis and treatment.
Natural, and Simple,
Steps to Recover From Adrenal Fatigue
It takes time to
burnout your adrenal glands, and as you might
suspect it also takes some time to recover. You can
expect:
- Six to nine months
of recovery time for minor adrenal fatigue
- 12 to 18 months
for moderate adrenal fatigue
- Up to 24 months
for severe adrenal fatigue[10]
The good news is that
natural treatments are very effective for this
syndrome, and with time, patience, and the tips that
follow it is possible to recover.
- Probably the
single most important area is to have powerful
tools and strategies to address the current and
past emotional traumas in your life. Prayer,
meditation and meridian tapping techniques can be
very helpful here. If you were to focus only on
one area it would be best to concentrate in this
area as this really is the central key to
restoring your adrenal health.
- Listen to your
body and rest when you feel tired (this includes
during the day by taking short naps or just laying
down)
- Sleep in (until 9
a.m. if you feel like it)
- Exercise regularly
using a comprehensive program of strength,
aerobic, core, and interval training
- Eat a healthy
nutrient-dense diet like the one described in my
nutrition plan, according to your Nutritional Type
- Avoid stimulants
like coffee and soda, as these can further exhaust
your adrenal glands
Further, to maintain
proper adrenal function it is imperative to control
your blood sugar levels. If you are eating the right
foods for your Nutritional Type, your blood sugar
levels should balance out, and the following
guidelines will also help:
- Eat a small meal
or snack every three to four hours
- Eat within the
first hour upon awakening
- Eat a small snack
near bedtime
- Eat before
becoming hungry. If hungry, you have already
allowed yourself to run out of fuel (low blood
sugar), which places additional stress on your
adrenal glands
You may also want to
see a physician well versed in bioidentical hormone
replacement, and get tested to see if you could
benefit from the use of DHEA. DHEA is a natural
steroid and precursor hormone produced by the
adrenals, and levels are often very low in people
with adrenal fatigue. Keep in mind, of course, that
DHEA is not a quick cure, and should not be used as
a sole treatment.
Treating adrenal
fatigue requires a whole-body approach, one that
addresses the excess stress and unhealthy lifestyle
habits that wore out your adrenals in the first
place.
Interestingly the
very first step in normalizing sex hormones, either
male or female, is to first address the adrenal
hormone system. For example if you were to only
measure female hormones and then replace them with
bioidentical hormone therapy, you will virtually be
guaranteed to fail because the weakened adrenals
will never allow the hormones to equilibrate
properly.
Because your adrenal
health is so important to your overall health and
well-being, I highly recommend you work with a
knowledgeable natural health care practitioner to
find out if you have adrenal fatigue and then remedy
it.
The tips above are an
excellent starting point, however, and can be used
by nearly everyone to help give your adrenal glands
a healthy boost.
[1] Wilson,
James. “Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress
Syndrome.” Smart Publications, p. 3, 2002.
[2] Wilson,
James. “Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress
Syndrome.” Smart Publications, p. 6, 2002.
[3]
MayoClinic.com Addison’s Disease
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/addisons-disease/DS00361/DSECTION=causes
(Accessed June 11, 2009)
[4] National
Institutes of Health, Eunice Kennedy Shriver
National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, “Adrenal Gland Disorders”
http://www.nichd.nih.gov/health/topics/Adrenal_Gland_Disorders.cfm
(Accessed June 11, 2009)
[5]
Understanding Adrenal Function August 27, 2000,
Mercola.com
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2000/08/27/adrenals.aspx
(Accessed June 11, 2009)
[6] Wilson,
James. “Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress
Syndrome.” Smart Publications, p. 7, 2002.
[7] Wilson,
James. “Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress
Syndrome.” Smart Publications, p. 7, 2002.
[8] Veracity,
Dani. “Recovering From Adrenal Fatigue: How Your
Body Can Overcome Chronic Stress and Feel Energized
Again.” Natural News, April 6, 2006
http://www.naturalnews.com/019339.html (Accessed
June 11, 2009)
[9] Veracity,
Dani. “Recovering From Adrenal Fatigue: How Your
Body Can Overcome Chronic Stress and Feel Energized
Again.” Natural News, April 6, 2006
http://www.naturalnews.com/019339.html (Accessed
June 11, 2009)
[10]
Veracity, Dani. “Recovering From Adrenal Fatigue:
How Your Body Can Overcome Chronic Stress and Feel
Energized Again.” Natural News, April 6, 2006
http://www.naturalnews.com/019339.html (Accessed
June 11, 2009)