Systemic Homeostasis Recalibration is the intentional clinical intervention designed to shift the body’s entire operational set-point for critical physiological parameters back toward an optimal, functional baseline. This process addresses chronic allostatic overload where the body’s regulatory mechanisms have adapted to a suboptimal, stressed equilibrium. Recalibration requires coordinated adjustments across multiple feedback systems simultaneously.
Origin
The term combines ‘homeostasis,’ the tendency toward a stable internal environment, with ‘recalibration,’ implying a reset of the established operational parameters. This reflects the recognition that long-term stress can shift the entire system’s ‘normal’ range into a pathological state. It is a holistic concept applied to endocrinology.
Mechanism
The mechanism involves systematically reducing chronic inputs that drive the system away from equilibrium, such as inflammatory load or excessive sympathetic tone. Simultaneously, targeted support is provided to the primary regulatory centers, like the hypothalamus and pituitary, to reset their signaling thresholds. Successful recalibration is marked by the restoration of normal circadian rhythmicity and improved resilience to future stressors.
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