We often think of stress as a feeling—but your body treats it as a full-scale event. And over time, chronic stress leaves measurable fingerprints throughout the body.
A systematic review of 37 studies spanning 40 years of research identified the most reliable biomarkers—physiological signals—that rise or fall when stress becomes chronic. The findings give us a clearer picture of how stress affects long-term health and how lifestyle interventions, including exercise, fit into the prevention puzzle.
The review identified several measurable biomarkers linked to chronic stress across the HPA axis, immune system, metabolic health, and the autonomic nervous system. Here are the most relevant takeaways:
9 studies supported hair cortisol as one of the most reliable long-term stress indicators.
Hair cortisol reflects weeks to months of stress exposure—not just a stressful morning.
Low levels of BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) were consistently found in people experiencing chronic stress.
Some studies showed changes in ACTH, a hormone involved in the stress response.
Chronic stress can elevate:
Glucose
HbA1c
Triglycerides
Cholesterol
These changes may help explain why long-term stress increases risk for:
Type 2 diabetes
Cardiovascular disease
Weight gain and abdominal fat storage
Studies found higher levels of:
C-reactive protein (CRP)
Interleukin-6 (IL-6)
Interleukin-8 (IL-8)
These immune markers stay elevated even after the stressor passes—one reason chronic stress accelerates aging and lowers immunity.
Chronic stress isn’t “all in your head.”
It shows up biologically—and these changes influence how you feel, how you heal, and how you age.
What this means for you:
At FITNESS SF, we think about health across the entire lifespan, including how stress affects physical and mental well-being.
We design our spaces and programs to support stress-resilient living:
Whether your stress response ramps you up (fight-or-flight) or shuts you down (freeze), we offer movement solutions:
Strength training
Yoga
Low-impact cardio
Functional training
Team support from trainers who understand behavioral health
You don’t need biomarkers to tell you when you’re overwhelmed—but it’s encouraging to know that your workout (and your "work-in," which is a recovery-focused workout) is one of the most powerful tools you have to keep your stress physiology in balance.
*The content on this blog is provided for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. No responsibility or liability is assumed for any actions taken based on the information provided.