PART Ⅰ MECHANISMS INVOLVED IN REACTIONS TO STRESS 1
Ⅰ.Adaptive Reactions to Stress.&Hans Selye and Claude Fortier 3
Ⅱ.Domestication of the Norway Rat and Its Implications for the Problem of Stress.&Curt P.Richter 19
Ⅲ.Situational Stresses and Extrapyramidal Disease in Different Personalities.&Robert S.Schwab and John S.Pritchard 48
Ⅳ.The Relative Importance of Social and Hereditary Factors in Producing Disturbances in Life Adjustment during Periods of Stress in Laboratory Animals.&J.P.Scott 61
Ⅴ.The Reaction to Pain as Determined by the Galvanic Skin Response.&Manuel Furer and James D.Hardy with the assistance of Margaret D.Meixner and Rose Weiss 72
Ⅵ.Experimental Production of Human Convulsive Brain Potentials by Stress-induced Effects upon Neural Integrative Funcion:Dynamics of the Convulsive Reaction to Stress.&Wayne Barker and Susan Barker 90
Ⅶ.Bodily Adjustments in Man during Stress in the Absence of Most Visceral Afferents and Sympathetic Nervous System Regulation.&Bronson S.Ray and A.Dale Console 114
Ⅷ.Reaction to Life Stresses Following Unilateral Prefrontal Lobectomy or Lobotomy.&John E.Scarff 121
Ⅸ.The Relation between the Decline of Anxiety-inducing and Anxiety-resolving Factors in a Deteriorating Culture and Its Relevance to Bodily Disease.&Leo W.Simmons 127
Ⅹ.Life Situations,Emotions and Idiopathic Epilepsy.&John Higgins,Henry Lederer and Milton Rosenbaum 137
Ⅺ.The Adverse Effect Upon a Family Resulting from a Radical Change of Personality in One Member after Frontal Lobotomy.&Yale David Koskoff and Frederick L.Weniger 148
Ⅻ.Some Specific Factors that Modify Tolerance for Environmental Stress.&Howard Liddell 155
ⅩⅢ.The Effect of Thalamic Lesions upon the Emotional Reactivity (Rorschach and Behavior Studies).&C.Orchinik,R.koch,H.T.Wycis,H.Freed and E.A.Spiegel 172
PART Ⅱ THE PROBLEM OF SPECIFICITY IN BODILY REACTIONS DURING STRESS 209
ⅩⅣ.Communication and Bodily Disease:A Study of Vasospastic Conditions.&Jurgen Ruesch and A.Rodney Prestwood 211
ⅩⅤ.Specificity of Bodily Reactions under Stress.A Physiological Study of Somatic Symptom Mechanisms in Psychiatric Patients.&Robert B.Malmo,Charles Shagass and Frederick H.Davis 231
ⅩⅥ.The Predictable Association of Certain Emotions and biochemical Changes in the Blood.&Oskar Diethelm,M.Freile Fleetwood and Ade T.Milhorat 262
ⅩⅦ.An Investigation of the Electrical Resistance of the Skin during Induced Emotional Stress in Normal Individuals,and in Patients with Internal Diseases.&J.M.Van der Valk and J.Groen 279
ⅩⅧ.Life Situations,Emotions and the Excretion of Hippuric and Acid in Anxiety States.&Harold Persky,Roy R.Grinker,I.Arthur Mirsky and Stanford R.Gamm 297
ⅩⅨ.Life Situations and Serum Antibody Titers.&John L.Bakke and Harold G.Wolff 307
PART Ⅲ LIFE STRESS AND DISORDERS OF GROWTH,DEVELOPMENT AND METABOLISM 315
ⅩⅩ.Socio-emotional Factors Accounting for Growth Failure in Children as Measured by the Wetzel Grid.&Ralph I.Fried 317
ⅩⅪ.Stress and the Adrenal Cortex With Special Reference to Potassium Metabolism.&Hudson Hoagland 326
ⅩⅫ.Studies in Diabetes Mellitus:Changes in Glucose,Ketone,and Water Metabolism during Stress.&Lawrence E.Hinkle,Jr.and Stewart Wolf 338
ⅩⅫ.Life Situations,Emotions and Hyperinsulinism.&Sidney A.Portis 390
ⅩⅩⅣ.Zest and Carbohydrate Metabolism.&Warren S.Carlson and Franz G.Alexander 406
ⅩⅩⅤ.The Relation of Life Stress to Arthritis.&Leon Hellman 412
ⅩⅩⅥ.Changes in Body Heat Regulation Associated with Varying Life Situations and Emotional States.&Helen Goodell,David T.Graham and Harold G.Wolff 418
ⅩⅩⅦ.Hyperthermia as a Manifestation of Stress.&Meyer Friedman 433
ⅩⅩⅧ.Life Situations,Emotions and Graves' Disease.&Theodore Lidz and John C.Whitehorn 445
ⅩⅩⅨ.Dynamic Aspects of the Personality Features and Reactions Characteristic of Patients with Graves Disease.&George C.Ham,Franz Alexander and Hugh T.Carmichael 451
ⅩⅩⅩ.Endocrinopathy during Education for Professional Careers:Effects of Therapy.&John W.Ewell,Paul L.Munson and William T.Salter 458
ⅩⅩⅪ.Measures of Stress Responsivity in Younger and Older Men.&Gregory Pincus 469
ⅩⅩⅫ.Effect of Agents Inducing Deliria on the Course of Certain Bodily Reactions to Stress.&Thos.J.Heldt 477
PART Ⅳ LIFE STRESS AND DISEASE OF THE EYE 521
ⅩⅩⅩⅢ.Life Situations,Emotions and Glaucoma.&Herbert S.Ripley 523
ⅩⅩⅪⅤ.Corneal Vascular Changes in Association with Conflict in a Patient with Phlyctenular Keratitis.&Stewart Wolf and Paul E.Messier 537
PART Ⅴ LIFE STRESS AND DISEASE OF THE AIRWAYS 543
ⅩⅩⅩⅤ.Life Situations,Emotions and Nasal Disease:Evidence on Summative Effects Exhibited in Patients with"Hay Fever."&Thomas H.Holmes,Theodore Treuting and Harold G.Wolff 545
ⅩⅩⅩⅥ.Variations in Response to Standard Amounts of Chemical Agents during Alterations in Feeling States in Relation to Occurrence of Asthma.&Daniel H.Funkenstein 566
ⅩⅩⅩⅦ.Life Situations,Emotions,and Dyspnea.&Harold N.Willard,Roy C.Swan,Jr.and George A.Wolf,Jr 583
ⅩⅩⅩⅧ.Variations in the Secretion of Bronchial Mucus during Periods of Life Stress.&Ian Stevenson 596
PART Ⅵ LIFE STRESS AND HEADACHE 603
ⅩⅩⅩⅨ.Psychological Mechanisms in Chronic Headache.&Arnold P.Friedman and Charles Brenner 605
ⅩL.Vascular Headache Experimentally Induced by Presentation of Pertinent Life Experiences.Modificaton of the Course of Vascular Headache by Alterations of Situations and Reactions.&Robert M.Marcussen 609
PART Ⅶ LIFE STRESS AND DISEASES OF THE STOMACH 615
ⅩLⅠ.Effects on Gastric Secretion of Frontal Lobe Stimulation.&Lycurgus M.Davey,Birger R.Kaada and John F.Fulton 617
ⅩLⅡ.Pepsinogen Excretion (Uropepsin) as an Index of the Influence of Various Life Situations of Gastric Secretion.&I.Arthur Mirsky,Stanley Kaplan and Robert H.Broh-Kahn 628
ⅩLⅢ.Psychosomatic Aspects of Salivary Activity I.Hypersalivation in Patients with Peptic Uleer.&Thomas S.Szasz 647
ⅩLⅣ.Variations of Gastric Functions during Conscious and Unconscious Conflict States.&Sydney G.Margolin,David Orringer,M.Ralph Kaufman,Asher Winkelstein,Franklin Hollander,Henry Janowitz,Aaron Stein and Milton Levy 656
ⅩLⅤ 665
PART Ⅷ LIFE STRESS AND DISEASES OF THE COLON 677
ⅩLⅥ.Life Situations,Emotions and Chronic Ulcerative Colitis.&William J.Grace 679
ⅩLⅦ.Variations in Attitudes,Behavior and Feeling-States as Exhibited in the Play of Children during Modifications in the Course of Ulcerative Colitis.&Dane G.Prugh 692
ⅩLⅧ.Modifications in the Course of Ulcerative Colitis in Relationship to Changes in Life Situations and Reaction Patterns.&Erich Lindemann 706
ⅩLⅨ.Constipation and Diarrhea,as Reactions to Life Stress.&Thomas P.Almy,Fred Kern,Jr.and Frank K.Abbot 724
PART Ⅸ LIFE STRESS AND DISEASE OF THE MUSCLES,JOINTS AND PERIARTICULAR STRUCTURES 733
L.Psychological Conflict and Neuromuscular Tension.I.Preliminary Report on a Method,as Applied to Rheumatoid Arthritis.&Louis A.Gottschalk,Herman M.Serota,Louis B.Shapiro 735
LⅠ.Personality Factors in Osteoarthritis.&Henry Lihn,Karl Menninger and Martin Mayman 744
LⅡ.Life Situations,Emotions and Backache.&Thomas H.Holmes and Harold G.Wolff 750
PART Ⅹ LIFE STRESS AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE 773
LⅢ.Possible Cortical Areas Involved in Arterial Hypertension.&William P.Chapman,Robert B.Livingston,Kenneth E.Livingston and William B.Sweet 775
LⅣ 799
LⅤ.The Relation of Stress to Clotting Time,Relative Viscosity and Certain Other Biophysical Alterations of the Blood in the Normotensive and Hypertensive Subject.&Robert A.Schneider 818
LⅥ.Life Situations,Emotions and Neurocirculatory Asthenia (Anxiety Neurosis,Neurasthenia,Effort Syndrome).&Mandel E.Cohen and Paul D.White 832
LⅦ.Life Situations,Emotions and the Course of Patients with Arterial Hypertension.&Morton F.Reiser,Albert A.Brust,Alrin P.Shapiro,Harrison M.Baker,William Ranschoff and Eugene B.Ferris 870
LⅧ.The Possible Etiological Relevance of Personality Factors in Arterial Hypertension.&George Saslow,Gregory C.Gressel,Frank O.Shobe,Philip H.DuBois and Henry A.Schroeder 881
LⅨ.Character Structure in Hypertensive Persons.&Nathan W.Ackerman 900
LⅩ 919
LⅪ.Essential Hypertension in one of Identical Twins.An Experimental Study of Cardiovascular Reactions in the Y Twins.&John T.Flynn,Mary A.K.Kennedy and Stewart Wolf 944
LⅫ.Physical Characteristics of the Y Twins and Their Relation to Hypertension.&William H.Sheldon and Robert Ball 952
LⅩⅢ.An Appraisal of Factors that Evoke and Modify the Hypertensive Reaction Pattern.&Stewart Wolf and Edward M.Shepard 966
PART Ⅺ LIFE STRESS AND DISEASE OF THE SKIN 985
LⅪⅤ.The Pathogenesis of Hives:Experimental Study of Life Situations,Emotions,and Cutaneous Vascular Reactions.&David T.Graham 987
LⅩⅤ.Life Situations,Emotions,and Atopic Dermatitis.&Joseph G.Kepecs and Milton Robin 1010
PART Ⅻ LIFE STRESS AND GENITAL DISORDERS 1017
LⅩⅥ.Disturbances of Bladder Function Associated with Emotional States.&Leonard R.Straub,Herbert S.Ripley and Stewart Wolf 1019
LⅩⅦ.Disturbances in Sexual Functions during Periods of Stress.&W.Horsley Gantt 1030
LⅩⅧ.Life Situations,Emotions and Gynecologic Pain Associated with Congestion.&H.C.Taylor,Jr 1051
PART ⅩⅢ A FORMULATION 1057
LⅩⅨ.Life Stress and Bodily Disease-A Formulation.&Harold G.Wolff 1059
Membership List 1095
Index 1109