Literature DB >> 17075058

Day-to-day dynamics of experience--cortisol associations in a population-based sample of older adults.

Emma K Adam1, Louise C Hawkley, Brigitte M Kudielka, John T Cacioppo.   

Abstract

In 156 older adults, day-to-day variations in cortisol diurnal rhythms were predicted from both prior-day and same-day experiences, to examine the temporal ordering of experience-cortisol associations in naturalistic environments. Diary reports of daily psychosocial, emotional, and physical states were completed at bedtime on each of three consecutive days. Salivary cortisol levels were measured at wakeup, 30 min after awakening, and at bedtime each day. Multilevel growth curve modeling was used to estimate diurnal cortisol profiles for each person each day. The parameters defining those profiles (wakeup level, diurnal slope, and cortisol awakening response) were predicted simultaneously from day-before and same-day experiences. Prior-day feelings of loneliness, sadness, threat, and lack of control were associated with a higher cortisol awakening response the next day, but morning awakening responses did not predict experiences of these states later the same day. Same-day, but not prior-day, feelings of tension and anger were associated with flatter diurnal cortisol rhythms, primarily because of their association with higher same-day evening cortisol levels. Although wakeup cortisol levels were not predicted by prior-day levels of fatigue and physical symptoms, low wakeup cortisol predicted higher levels of fatigue and physical symptoms later that day. Results are consistent with a dynamic and transactional function of cortisol as both a transducer of psychosocial and emotional experience into physiological activation and an influence on feelings of energy and physical well-being.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17075058      PMCID: PMC1636578          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0605053103

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  46 in total

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  253 in total

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4.  Longitudinal stability and developmental properties of salivary cortisol levels and circadian rhythms from childhood to adolescence.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Shirtcliff; Amber L Allison; Jeffrey M Armstrong; Marcia J Slattery; Ned H Kalin; Marilyn J Essex
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6.  Prenatal Stress and the Cortisol Awakening Response in African-American and Caucasian Women in the Third Trimester of Pregnancy.

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Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2016-10

7.  The cortisol awakening response (CAR) interacts with acute interpersonal stress to prospectively predict depressive symptoms among early adolescent girls.

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Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology       Date:  2019-04-27       Impact factor: 4.905

Review 8.  Loneliness across phylogeny and a call for comparative studies and animal models.

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10.  Endogenous in-session cortisol during exposure therapy predicts symptom improvement: Preliminary results from a scopolamine-augmentation trial.

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