The
viral phrase may sound like dark humour, but science is starting to prove it isn't far from the truth. You've probably seen it floating around social media, a wry, half-joking caption that reads: "What doesn't kill you comes back as an autoimmune disease." It gets shared with tired laughter by people managing lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, Hashimoto's, or multiple sclerosis. But beneath the humour is a question that researchers are now taking very seriously: can chronic stress actually trigger the immune system to attack the body it was designed to protect?
What Happens In Your Body When You're Chronically Stressed?
When you experience stress, your brain activates the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis, triggering a cascade of hormones, most notably cortisol. In short bursts, cortisol is protective. It dampens inflammation, sharpens focus, and prepares the body for challenge. But under chronic stress, this system misfires. The body becomes resistant to cortisol's signals, receptors stop responding, and instead of calming inflammation, the stress response begins to fuel it. A landmark 2025 review confirmed that chronic HPA axis dysfunction creates a pro-inflammatory state that disrupts the immune system's ability to distinguish between foreign invaders and healthy tissue, the core mechanism behind conditions like lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and multiple sclerosis.
The Evidence Is Hard To Ignore
A major 2018 study published in JAMA, one of the largest of its kind, tracked over one million people in Sweden and found that individuals diagnosed with stress-related disorders faced a significantly higher risk of developing autoimmune conditions in the years that followed. A 2025 meta-analysis in Frontiers in Psychiatry confirmed that PTSD specifically is associated with a measurably increased autoimmune risk, and that severity of stress correlated directly with severity of that risk. Even childhood trauma leaves a mark. Research consistently links adverse early-life experiences to autoimmune disease in adulthood, affecting the skin, joints, and central nervous system. The body, it turns out, keeps a biological score.The gut connectionOne surprising pathway researchers are investigating is the gut. Psychological stress disrupts the intestinal barrier, the lining that keeps bacteria and toxins from leaking into the bloodstream. When this barrier is compromised, the immune system is perpetually triggered, potentially setting off the chain of events that leads to autoimmunity. Microbiome imbalances have been found in patients with type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, and lupus, all conditions with known stress associations.
So, Does Stress Cause Autoimmune Disease?
Not in isolation. Genetics, environment, hormones, and gut health all play roles. But chronic psychological stress is now a firmly established, biologically plausible trigger, not a soft hypothesis. The relationship also runs both ways: autoimmune disease causes stress, which worsens the disease, which causes more stress. Breaking that cycle is a medical imperative, not just self-care. Social connection matters too, isolation alone is independently linked to higher systemic inflammation. Small, consistent changes in how you manage stress today may quietly protect your immune system for years to come. The meme is dark, but it's also a signal the body has been sending for a long time.