| Literature DB >> 31160639 |
Diego Gonzalez1,2, Dario Jacobsen1, Carolina Ibar1, Carlos Pavan3, José Monti3, Nahuel Fernandez Machulsky1,2, Ayelen Balbi1, Analy Fritzler1, Juan Jamardo1, Esteban M Repetto1,4, Gabriela Berg1,2,4, Bibiana Fabre5,6.
Abstract
We present the development of the first procedure for hair cortisol measurement through an automated method. Hair samples were obtained from 286 individuals. After cortisol extraction, samples were measured in a Siemens Immulite 2000 (Gwynedd, UK) automated chemoluminiscent immunoassay analyzer. Normal reference values were obtained from hair cortisol levels measured in 213 healthy individuals with low levels of stress. Hair cortisol concentration median was 55 pg/mg hair (2.5-97.5 percentile (40-128)) in healthy individuals with low levels of stress and 250 pg/mg hair (range 182-520) in stressed individuals. No significant differences were observed in hair cortisol levels between subjects with and without dye (40 (40-107) and 40 (40-155) pg/mg hair, respectively; p = 0.128). The novel procedure presented here shows an adequate analytical performance.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31160639 PMCID: PMC6546685 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44693-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Stability assay of the reconstituted hair extract at 4 °C and −20 °C. (A) Stability in two concentrations (Level 1: 163 and Level 2: 263 pg/mg hair) at 4 °C (F = 1.72, p = 0.306 and F = 1.22, p = 0.436, respectively). (B) Stability in two concentrations (163 and 263 pg/mg hair) at −20 °C (F = 0.60, p = 0.68 and F = 2.34, p = 0.21, respectively).
Figure 2MS/MS spectra for the (M + 1H)+1 ion at m/z 363. (A) Cortisol reference material; (B) sample matching cortisol characteristic profile; (C) sample with incomplete match to the cortisol profile and therefore considered “Negative”. (D) Sample that clearly does not match the cortisol profile.
Sociodemographic and general characteristics of the studied population.
| Variables | n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | Women | 202 (87) |
| Man | 30 (13) | |
| Age (years) | 18–24 | 12 (5) |
| 25–40 | 95 (41) | |
| 41–85 | 125 (54) | |
| Education level | Primary school | 5 (2) |
| Secondary school | 60 (26) | |
| Tertiary level | 39 (17) | |
| University degree | 128 (55) | |
| Employment status | Unemployed | 7 (3) |
| Employed | 190 (82) | |
| University student | 35 (15) | |
| Marital status | Married | 83 (36) |
| Divorced | 6 (3) | |
| In a relationship | 74 (32) | |
| Unmarried | 67 (28) | |
| Widower | 2 (1) | |
| Contraceptive therapy | No | 192 (83) |
| Yes | 40 (17) | |
| Physical activity | No | 144 (62) |
| Yes | 88 (38) | |
Figure 3Hair cortisol concentration in stressed and individuals with low levels of stress. Hair cortisol levels in healthy individuals with low levels of stress (40–128 pg/mg; n = 213) and in stressed individuals (182–520 pg/mg; n = 19); p < 0.05.