From stress hormone to resilience
Stress is part of everyday life. Short bursts of stress can boost focus and performance, but long term stress increases the risk of mental health problems such as depression and anxiety. Cortisol plays a key role in this process. This stress hormone follows a clear day night rhythm, with high levels in the early morning and low levels in the evening and night. Many people with stress related disorders appear to have a disturbed cortisol rhythm.
RHYTHM
With this new project, RHYTHM, Vinkers aims to find out whether this cortisol rhythm is the missing link between stress and mental health. “We have known for a long time that cortisol is important, but most studies only looked at a few isolated time points,” Vinkers explains.
Towards rhythm based interventions for mental health
By combining intensive hormone monitoring in daily life with experimental and clinical studies, RHYTHM aims to move from static measurements to a dynamic view of the stress system. “If we can show that disturbed cortisol rhythms are a key mechanism in stress related disorders, this opens the door to new ways to support resilience,” says Vinkers. This might include medication that restores the rhythm, but also behavioural and digital interventions that strengthen sleep and daily routines.
European Research Council
The ERC Consolidator grant is a highly competitive personal grant from the European Research Council that enables excellent researchers to consolidate and expand their independent research line. RHYTHM fits within the broader ambition of Amsterdam UMC and the department of Psychiatry to link fundamental discoveries about stress and resilience to concrete improvements in mental health care. Read more about the 2025 ERC Grants.
Prof. dr. Christiaan Vinkers is psychiatrist at GGZ inGeest and Professor Stress and Resilience at Amsterdam UMC. Additionally, he is a program leader of the Amsterdam Neuroscience Research Program Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep. His research focuses on stress, (childhood)trauma, resilience and depression. He is founder of the national Stress-NL network, PI of DESTRESS and is involved in Stress in Action. He puts a lot of effort in knowledge transfer about stress and mental health to fellow scientists, health care professionals, and the broader public in The Netherlands.
Photo by Digidaan