Realistic illustration of a anxious, insomniac young Saudi female student with overlaid imagery of reduced natural killer immune cells.
Realistic illustration of a anxious, insomniac young Saudi female student with overlaid imagery of reduced natural killer immune cells.
AI 生成的图像

Anxiety and insomnia tied to lower levels of key immune cells in young women

AI 生成的图像
事实核查

A study of young female university students in Saudi Arabia has found that symptoms of anxiety and insomnia are associated with reduced levels of natural killer cells, key components of the immune system’s early defense. The findings suggest that psychological stressors may be linked to weaker immune responses, though the research shows correlation rather than causation and is limited to a small, specific population.

Natural killer (NK) cells serve as part of the immune system's frontline defense, targeting infected or abnormal cells to help prevent the spread of infections and disease. In a recent study published in Frontiers in Immunology, researchers from Taibah University in Madinah, Saudi Arabia, examined how anxiety and insomnia are associated with NK cells among 60 healthy female students aged 17 to 23.

The cross-sectional study, conducted at Taibah University, asked participants to complete questionnaires on sociodemographic factors and validated measures of generalized anxiety (GAD-7) and insomnia symptoms. According to the study, about 53% of the students reported sleep disturbances suggestive of insomnia, while 75% reported anxiety symptoms at varying levels of severity, including roughly 17% with moderate and 13% with severe symptoms.

Blood samples were analyzed to assess NK cell counts and subtypes. The team focused on circulatory NK cells and their two main subpopulations: the cytotoxic CD16+CD56dim cells, which constitute the majority of peripheral NK cells, and the less frequent CD16+CD56high cells, which are involved in cytokine production and immunoregulation.

The results showed that students with anxiety symptoms had a lower percentage and number of circulatory NK cells and their subpopulations compared with students who did not report anxiety symptoms. Severity appeared to matter: students with moderate or severe anxiety had a significantly lower percentage of circulatory NK cells, while those with minimal or mild anxiety showed only a statistically insignificant decline. Among students reporting insomnia symptoms, the number and percentage of total NK cells and their subpopulations were reduced, and higher anxiety scores in this group were negatively associated with the proportion of total peripheral NK cells.

"We found that in students with insomnia symptoms, count and percentage of total NK cells and their sub-populations were declined," said first author Dr. Renad Alhamawi, an assistant professor of immunology and immunotherapy at Taibah University, in a statement released by Frontiers. "Students with general anxiety symptoms, on the other hand, had a lower percentage and number of circulatory NK cells and their sub-populations, compared to symptom-free students."

The authors note that reductions in NK cells can impair immune function, potentially increasing susceptibility to infections, cancers and some mental health conditions, including depression. They suggest that understanding how psychological stressors such as anxiety and sleep disturbance influence the distribution and activity of immune cells, especially peripheral NK cells, may offer insights into mechanisms underlying inflammation and tumor development.

At the same time, the researchers emphasize the limits of their work. The study was cross-sectional and cannot determine cause and effect. It included only young women at a single university in Saudi Arabia, a group in which anxiety and sleep problems have been reported to be rising disproportionately, which restricts how broadly the findings can be generalized. The authors call for larger, longitudinal studies that include different age groups, sexes and regions to clarify how anxiety and insomnia may relate to immune function over time.

Previous research cited by the authors and other experts suggests that lifestyle measures such as regular physical activity, stress management and adequate, consistent sleep may support healthy NK cell activity and overall immune function. However, anxiety and insomnia are complex conditions that involve multiple biological and psychological processes, and the new findings indicate that they may contribute to immune dysregulation and, in turn, to chronic inflammation and reduced quality of life. The study underscores the importance of addressing mental health and sleep in efforts to maintain robust immune defenses.

人们在说什么

Discussions on X about the study are limited and mostly neutral, featuring shares and paraphrases of the findings linking anxiety and insomnia to lower natural killer cell levels in young Saudi women. Some posts emphasize the connection between mental health stressors and immune function, with minor Arabic-language reactions relating stress to broader immune dysregulation.

相关文章

Illustration of a woman with depression symptoms overlaid with microscopic view of aging monocytes in blood, linking to study on women with and without HIV.
AI 生成的图像

Study links monocyte “biological aging” in blood to emotional depression symptoms in women with and without HIV

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像 事实核查

A study of 440 participants from the Women’s Interagency HIV Study found that accelerated epigenetic aging in monocytes—an immune cell type—tracked more closely with emotional and cognitive depression symptoms such as hopelessness and loss of pleasure than with physical symptoms like fatigue. The work, published in The Journals of Gerontology: Series A, adds evidence that cell-type-specific aging measures could contribute to future biological tools to complement symptom-based depression screening, though researchers say more validation is needed before clinical use.

Researchers at McGill University report a drug-based method to temporarily enhance natural killer (NK) cells—an immune cell type—by inhibiting two proteins, improving the cells’ ability to attack several aggressive cancers in preclinical experiments.

由 AI 报道 事实核查

Researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital report that mutations commonly associated with clonal blood-cell expansion and some blood cancers were enriched in microglia-like immune cells in Alzheimer’s brains and were also detectable in matched blood samples. The Cell study proposes that age- or injury-related weakening of the blood-brain barrier could allow mutated blood immune cells to enter the brain, potentially amplifying inflammation and contributing to neurodegeneration.

Researchers from the University of Geneva and Lausanne University Hospital report they have visualized, in three dimensions and under near-native conditions, how cytotoxic T cells organize their killing machinery at the immune synapse. The work, published in Cell Reports, applies cryo-expansion microscopy to human T cells and to tumor tissue samples, providing nanoscale views intended to support immunology and cancer research.

由 AI 报道

Researchers at Kyoto University have traced the origins of human blood cells to single-celled organisms that lived about 700 million years ago. Their analysis shows that modern immune cells reflect an ancient evolutionary path dating back to the emergence of multicellular animals.

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝