Depression doesn’t seem to affect blood glucose levels, while stress does. But there are simple ways to do something about both.
In a study published in the April 2007 Psychosomatic
Medicine, Richard Surwit, PhD, chief of Duke’s Division of
Medical Psychology, and colleagues found that cognitive
behavioral therapy -- basically teaching people to see life as
a glass that’s half full, rather than half empty -- improved
depression in a group of patients with diabetes.
But treating depression did not have any effect on blood
sugar control. Surwit was surprised at the results because
previous research, though mixed, had suggested that depression
and glucose control were linked. His own study, with Duke
colleague Mark Feinglos, MD, had shown a small connection in
patients with type 1 diabetes.
Richard Surwitt, MD“I was just
stunned,” Surwit says. “Cognitive behavioral therapy’s effect
on depression was so significant, and yet there was no effect
on A1C [a marker of glucose levels over time].”
Even though treating depression doesn’t seem to have any
effect on diabetes, it’s well known, from research by Surwit
and others, that stress can raise blood sugar. Stress causes
the body to make more hormones such as epinephrine,
norepinephrine, and cortisol, which can lead to disruptions in
the body’s normally tight control of blood sugar.
But cognitive behavioral therapy, as well as progressive
muscle relaxation, can produce reliable decreases in these
hormones. For example, in one of their earliest studies of
stress and diabetes control, Surwit and Feinglos had 12
diabetes patients stay in a dormitory setting. Half of them
learned and practiced progressive muscle relaxation.
That group showed decreased blood sugar after only nine
days, and blood samples revealed that their cortisol levels
were measurably lower than the control group’s.
“When the patient is having trouble controlling their
glucose, physicians might suggest that they monitor their blood
glucose in situations where they feel they’re under stress, and
in situations where they feel they’re not,” Surwit says. “And
if there’s a pattern there, a physician can recommend that they
do something about it behaviorally.”
For instance, self-help books such as Surwit’s The
Mind-Body Diabetes Revolution can help people learn simple
techniques to manage stress on their own.
“The reason I did this book was, for most people, insurance
is not going to pay for behavioral intervention unless there’s
a psychiatric diagnosis,” he says.
Muscle relaxation sounds easy enough, but can people really
practice cognitive-behavioral therapy on their own? Yes, Surwit
says.
“We created a structured set of exercises that you can do to
look at a situation, analyze it, decide whether the way you are
responding is appropriate or not, and then change how you are
responding if necessary.
“A lot of stress that we put on ourselves has to do with how
we appraise what’s going on around us,” he says.
For example, if your work supervisor snaps at you, you might
assume that he’s unhappy with you. Or, you could assume that
he’s just having a bad day.
“People have to be able to figure out which is which. If
your boss is having a bad day, that’s too bad for your boss,
but it’s not something that should make you upset.”