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Do diurnal salivary cortisol curves carry meaningful information about the regulatory biology of the HPA axis in healthy humans?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Do diurnal salivary cortisol curves carry meaningful information about the regulatory biology of the HPA axis in healthy humans?

James L. Abelson, Brisa N. Sánchez, Stefanie E. Mayer, Hedieh Briggs, Israel Liberzon and Nirmala Rajaram
Psychoneuroendocrinology, v 150, 106031
Apr 2023
PMID: 36801587
Featured in Collection :   UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
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https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12082605/pdf/nihms-2074163.pdfView
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Abstract

Cortisol awakening response Cortisol diurnal decline HPA regulatory biology Salivary cortisol Stress epidemiology
Salivary cortisol stress biomarkers have been extensively used in epidemiological work to document links between stress and ill health. There has been little effort to ground field friendly cortisol measures in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis regulatory biology that is likely relevant to delineating mechanistic pathways leading from stress exposure to detrimental health outcomes. Here, we utilized a healthy convenience sample (n = 140) to examine normal linkages between extensively collected salivary cortisol measures and available laboratory probes of HPA axis regulatory biology. Participants provided 9 saliva samples per day over 6 days within a month, while engaging in usual activities, and also participated in 5 regulatory tests (adrenocorticoptripin stimulation, dexamethasone/corticotropin-releasing-hormone stimulation, metyrapone, dexamethasone suppression, and Trier Social Stress Test). Logistical regression was used to test specific predictions linking cortisol curve components to regulatory variables and to explore widely for non-predicted associations. We found support for 2 of 3 original hypotheses, showing associations (1) between cortisol diurnal decline and feedback sensitivity as measured by dexamethasone suppression, and (2) between morning cortisol levels and adrenal sensitivity. We did not find links between central drive (metyrapone test) and end of day salivary levels. We confirmed an a priori expectation of limited linkage between regulatory biology and diurnal salivary cortisol measures, beyond those predicted. These data support an emerging focus on measures related to diurnal decline in epidemiological stress work. They raise questions about the biological meaning of other curve components, including morning cortisol levels, and perhaps CAR (Cortisol Awakening Response). If morning cortisol dynamics are linked to stress, more work on adrenal sensitivity in stress adaptation and stress-health links may be warranted. [Display omitted] •Salivary cortisol provides limited information about stress neurobiology regulation.•Cortisol diurnal decline reflects feedback inhibition in the body’s main stress axis.•Diurnal decline may deliver most value as a stress biomarker in epidemiological work.•Cortisol awakening response does not have strong connections to regulatory biology.•Awakening cortisol reflects adrenal sensitivity which merits attention in stress work.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Endocrinology & Metabolism
Neurosciences
Psychiatry
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