Selye (1976a) initially proposed a triadic model as the basis for the stress-response pattern. The elements included adrenal cortex hypertrophy, thymicolymphatic (e.g., the thymus, the lymph nodes, and the spleen) atrophy, and gastrointestinal ulcers. These three, he reasoned, were closely interdependent; they seemed to accompany most illnesses and were provoked no matter what the stimulus or illness. Selye could evoke the response in laboratory rats with agents such as formalin,
enzymes, hormones, heat, and cold, and he
Selye (1976a) initially proposed a triadic model as the basis for the stress-response pattern. The elements included adrenal cortex hypertrophy, thymicolymphatic (e.g., the thymus, the lymph nodes, and the spleen) atrophy, and gastrointestinal ulcers. These three, he reasoned, were closely interdependent; they seemed to accompany most illnesses and were provoked no matter what the stimulus or illness. Selye could evoke the response in laboratory rats with agents such as formalin,
enzymes, hormones, heat, and cold, and he
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