Abstract Across diverse domains of physiology, chronic dysfunction is frequently associated with reduced variability, diminished complexity, and declining adaptive flexibility. These observations have been documented across aging, chronic pain, frailty, autonomic dysfunction, cardiovascular disease, neurological disorders, and numerous other chronic conditions. Despite extensive documentation, a fundamental question remains unresolved: why do apparently unrelated chronic conditions repeatedly converge toward similar reductions in adaptability? This paper introduces a conceptual systems hypothesis intended to generate testable predictions regarding chronic human dysregulation. Variability collapse is interpreted not as the primary event, but as the observable consequence of a deeper organizational process: the progressive loss of adaptive options. The central hypothesis is that biological systems maintain reliability through access to multiple viable solutions. Under conditions of increasing uncertainty, systems may progressively prioritize stabilization, predictability, and familiar responses over exploration and alternative strategies. As stabilization expands, the range of available adaptive solutions contracts. Variability subsequently declines because fewer viable options remain available for expression. Within this framework, chronic dysfunction is interpreted as a process through which biological systems become increasingly dependent upon a progressively narrower set of organizational solutions. Reduced variability, reduced flexibility, and reduced physiological complexity may therefore represent parallel manifestations of a common systems-level phenomenon. The paper further proposes that transitions between states may provide a particularly sensitive window into adaptive capacity because transitions require continuous solution generation rather than maintenance of existing organization. If correct, the defining feature of chronic dysfunction may not be pathology alone, but the progressive reduction of available biological alternatives.
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Israel Don
Centre for Healthy Start Initiative
Oldham Council
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Israel Don (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1bd1b05783ba022b6fd2de — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20446166