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Cortisol and nutrition: How micronutrients, gender and lifestyle shape the stress response

Cortisol and nutrition: How micronutrients, gender and lifestyle shape the stress response

Guest article by our nutrition expert Dr. Dorothea Portius

Cortisol, the most significant glucocorticoid in the human body, is regulated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. It is not only the so-called "stress hormone," but also plays central roles in energy, immune, and brain metabolism.

The release of this important hormone follows a pronounced circadian rhythm: maximum concentrations in the early morning (about 30–45 minutes after waking up) and a continuous decline throughout the day. This natural dynamic is essential for energy, motivation, and cognitive performance.

Cortisol as a component of the neuroendocrine stress response with a wide range of effects

Glucose metabolism

  • Gluconeogenesis (glucose production in the liver)
  • Inhibition of glucose uptake in peripheral tissues
  • Insulin antagonistic

Immune system

  • Acute anti-inflammatory (inhibition of cytokines such as IL-1, IL-6, TNF-a)
  • Chronic immune inhibitory effect

Central nervous system

  • Influence on mood, vigilance, memory processes through stimulation of interactions with the amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex

Cardiovascular System

  • Blood pressure increasing effect:
  • Indirect stimulation of alpha-adrenergic receptors
  • Direct stimulation of mineralocorticoid receptors (sodium retention)

What happens with chronically elevated cortisol release?

A permanent activation of the HPA axis – for example, due to chronic stress, lack of sleep, inflammatory processes, or poor nutrition – leads to dysregulated cortisol release, e.g.B. in the form of a "flattened diurnal slope", d.h. there is no physiological drop in cortisol. Cortisol remains elevated in the second half of the day and especially in the evening.

 This disturbed rhythm has consequences:

  • Visceral obesity (increased accumulation of fat in the abdominal cavity) and insulin resistance
  • Neurocognitive disorders (e.g.reduced memory performance, concentration problems)
  • Depression, irritability, anxiety disorders
  • Increased inflammatory status and immunosuppression
  • High blood pressure, sleep disorders and exhaustion

Gender-specific differences: Cortisol does not affect everyone equally

Women exhibit a higher hormonal reactivity to psychosocial stress than men – especially in social contexts or in interpersonal conflict resolution. The HPA axis of women is more strongly influenced by sex hormones (estrogen and progesterone), which in turn modulate the glucocorticoid receptors.

Cycle-related fluctuations in stress response:

  • Follicular phase (1st–14thCycle day): weaker cortisol response, higher stress resilience
  • Luteal phase (Day 15–28): Increased cortisol reactivity, emotional irritability, sleep disturbances, decreased stress resilience
  • Menstruation: Increased sensitivity to pain, mood swings, magnesium losses
  • Perimenopause/Menopause: Decrease in estrogen and progesterone destabilizes HPA axis → risk of chronically elevated cortisol, "hormonal stress," inner restlessness

Men, on the other hand, often show a sympathetic-adrenaline dominated stress response through an increase in heart rate and activated by norepinephrine, while the cortisol-driven HPA activation tends to be flatter.

Nutrition as a Key Factor: Cortisol Influences Our Eating Behavior – and Vice Versa

Stress and Nutrition in Imbalance

Chronically Elevated Cortisol Levels (Stress) Promote Unfavorable Eating Behavior:

This Creates a Vicious Cycle of Stress, Elevated Cortisol, and Uncontrolled Eating, Which Can Lead to Long-Term Weight Gain, Insulin Resistance, and Metabolic Syndrome.

Nutrition for cortisol regulation: Which nutrients help?

Nutrition has the potential to specifically modulate cortisol levels – both through targeted macronutrient distribution and through the specific intake of micronutrients:

Magnesium – The natural stress blocker

Magnesium is a central anti-stress mineral that regulates the HPA axis through several mechanisms:

  • Inhibits the release of ACTH in the pituitary gland → Reduction of cortisol release
  • Reduces neuronal hyperexcitability through specific receptors (NMDA antagonism)
  • Promotes parasympathetic activity → calming effect on heart rate and sleep quality
  • Works synergistically with Vitamin B6: Improvement of mood and also reduction of PMS-related stress symptoms in women

Good to know: Stress increases the magnesium requirement (due to higher excretion in the kidneys and increased oxidative stress).Women also lose above-average amounts of magnesium during menstruation.

Recommended intake: 300–400 mg/day (women), higher doses may be necessary under increased stress, ideally in the form of organically bound magnesium (e.g., magnesium glycinate or threonate).

Magnesium-rich foods

  • Pumpkin seeds, almonds, cashews
  • Oatmeal, black beans
  • Dark chocolate (min.75 %)
  • Spinach, Swiss chard, Broccoli

Dorothea Portius is a nutritionist, researcher, and author

Other stress-relieving micronutrients

Nutrient

Effect

Food

Vitamin C

Suppression of cortisol spikes

Antioxidant effect

Bell pepper, Broccoli, Sea buckthorn, Black currants

B vitamins (z.B.B6, B1)

Cofactors of neurotransmitter synthesis such as serotonin &and dopamine

Reduction of mental exhaustion

Whole grains, legumes, eggs

Omega-3 fatty acids (DHA &and EPA)

Anti-inflammatory effects

Reduction of excessive cortisol reactions

Salmon, herring, algae and fish oil; precursors: flaxseed, rapeseed oil

Tryptophan

Starting substance of serotonin, mood regulation

Turkey, chicken, eggs, sesame, soy

Polyphenols (z.B.Catechins, flavonoids)

anxiolytic and reduction of tension states, antioxidative effects in the nervous system

berries, dark chocolate, green tea

Timing when eating is crucial: rhythmic eating supports the stress hormone balance

A disturbed and irregular eating rhythm can disrupt the circadian cortisol cycle.

  • early meals, especiallyCarbohydrate-rich (fiber) &and protein-rich breakfast mitigates the cortisol response during the day
  • Late and heavy evening meals can shift cortisol and melatonin production and disturb sleep
  • Time-restricted eating in accordance with the natural cortisol rhythm improves metabolic parameters and lowers inflammation levels

Conclusion on cortisol

Cortisol is not a "bad hormone," but a finely tuned regulator that helps us respond to special demands. However, in our hectic and overwhelming daily lives, chronic stress is constantly present – and with it the risk that cortisol becomes a risk factor instead of a helper.

Nutrition is a powerful modulator of this axis.Macro and micronutrients can help cushion cortisol spikes, stabilize neuroendocrine systems, and promote stress resilience. Magnesium stands out as a key mineral – especially for women, whose hormonal stress sensitivity is shaped by cycle phases and hormonal transitions.

A conscious approach and more mindfulness in food selection, dietary rhythms, and micronutrients is therefore not a "lifestyle topic," but an evidence-based strategy for stress management – both preventive and therapeutic.

Sources
  • Chawla S, Beretoulis S, Deere A et al. The Window Matters: A Systematic Review of Time Restricted Eating Strategies in Relation to Cortisol and Melatonin Secretion. Nutrients 2021; 13. doi:10.3390/nu13082525
  • James KA, Stromin JI, Steenkamp N et al. Understanding the relationships between physiological and psychosocial stress, cortisol and cognition. Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) 2023; 14: 1085950. doi:10.3389/fendo.2023.1085950
  • Lorig F, Kiessl GR, Laessle RG. Stress-related cortisol response and laboratory eating behavior in obese women. Eat Weight Disord 2016; 21: 237-243. doi:10.1007/s40519-015-0190-3
  • Moyers SA, Hagger MS. Physical activity and cortisol regulation: A meta-analysis. Biol Psychol 2023; 179: 108548. doi:10.1016/j.biopsycho.2023.108548
  • Pearlmutter P, DeRose G, Samson C et al. Sweat and saliva cortisol response to stress and nutrition factors. Sci Rep 2020; 10: 19050. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-75871-3
  • Pulopulos MM, Baeken C, De Raedt R. Cortisol response to stress: The role of expectancy and anticipatory stress regulation. Horm Behav 2020; 117: 104587. doi:10.1016/j.yhbeh.2019.104587

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