Home

dysregulaties

Dysregulaties are disturbances in the regulatory processes that maintain stability and coordinated function in living systems. They involve deviations from normal control of physiological variables such as heart rate, metabolism, hormone levels, neural signaling, immune responses, or behavior. Dysregulation can be transient or persistent and may reflect maladaptive responses to stress, disease, or environmental challenges.

In medicine and biology, commonly described domains include autonomic and neuroendocrine dysregulation, metabolic dysregulation (for example

Causes and mechanisms: Dysregulaties arise from altered feedback loops, receptor desensitization, signaling pathway disruption, or structural

Diagnosis and assessment: Evaluation is domain-specific and relies on clinical history, laboratory biomarkers, physiological testing, imaging,

Management and prognosis: Treatment aims to restore or compensate for regulatory imbalances by addressing underlying causes,

glucose
or
lipid
homeostasis),
immune
dysregulation
(inflammatory
or
autoimmune
tendencies),
and
dysregulation
of
gene
expression
or
epigenetic
control.
In
psychology,
regulation
of
emotions
and
stress
is
a
major
area
of
study,
while
in
ecology
similar
concepts
apply
to
regulatory
networks
that
govern
population
dynamics
and
resource
use.
changes
in
regulatory
networks.
They
may
be
triggered
by
genetic
variants,
chronic
inflammation,
aging,
medication
effects,
or
sustained
psychosocial
stress;
interactions
among
systems
can
amplify
dysregulatory
states.
and
longitudinal
monitoring.
Distinguishing
primary
regulatory
failure
from
downstream
consequences
can
be
challenging
and
may
require
integrated,
multidisciplinary
evaluation.
stabilizing
regulatory
systems,
and
supporting
adaptive
responses.
Strategies
include
lifestyle
modification,
pharmacotherapy,
psychotherapy,
and
rehabilitation.
Prognosis
depends
on
the
type,
duration,
and
reversibility
of
the
underlying
dysregulation.