| Literature DB >> 31578916 |
L M Glenk1, O D Kothgassner2, A Felnhofer3, J Gotovina1,4, C L Pranger1,4, A N Jensen5, N Mothes-Luksch5, A Goreis6,7, R Palme8, E Jensen-Jarolim1,4,5.
Abstract
Numerous studies have demonstrated that acute psychological stress, induced by the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) paradigm, affects salivary cortisol secretion and self-reported stress measures including anxiety. Allergy has been related to altered cortisol responsiveness and increased stress vulnerability. Here, we investigated acute stress responses and emotion regulation strategies in cohorts of allergic and healthy individuals. Groups of allergics and healthy individuals were subjected to the TSST and experienced levels of stress and anxiety, as well as emotion regulation strategies, were assessed. Cortisol and oxytocin concentrations were measured in saliva or plasma. The present findings confirm earlier results of altered stress responsiveness in allergic individuals. Acute stress by the TSST evoked higher physiological arousal in allergics by means of salivary cortisol secretion. Allergics also scored higher on emotion suppression. However, individuals who were more likely to use reappraisal recovered more efficiently from the cortisol increase. No such effect for reappraisal was found in the healthy population. No differences in self-reported anxiety and stress emerged between the groups. Plasma oxytocin levels prior to the TSST were significantly higher in allergics. Our data corroborate earlier findings on altered stress susceptibility in allergics. Moreover, we identified differences in emotion regulation and oxytocin secretion which should be further explored. Accounting for the emerging global prevalence of allergy, more in-depth research into the experience of stress, coping strategies and stress-related molecules in allergic people is warranted.Short summaryThis study addressed stress experiences and emotion regulation in allergic and non-allergic adults. Allergics scored higher on emotion suppression, had higher pre-stress concentrations of plasma oxytocin and exhibited a stronger salivary cortisol response to stress than healthy people. The research outcomes indicate that allergic individuals cope less efficiently with acute stress but may benefit from adaptive emotion regulation strategies such as reappraisal.Entities:
Keywords: Allergy; cortisol; emotion regulation; emotion suppression; oxytocin; reappraisal; stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31578916 PMCID: PMC7261398 DOI: 10.1080/10253890.2019.1675629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stress ISSN: 1025-3890 Impact factor: 3.493
Characterization and clinical description of study participants.
| Descriptors | Allergic (number) | Healthy (number) |
|---|---|---|
| Sample | 18 (46.15%) | 21 (53.85%) |
| Gender distribution | 9 ♂ | 10 ♂ |
| 9 ♀ | 11 ♀ | |
| Asthma | 4 | – |
| Total IgE > 100 IU/ml | 10 | 1 |
| Doctor-diagnosed allergies | 18 | – |
| 8 | – | |
| 13 | – | |
| 12 | – | |
| Additional other allergens | 10 | – |
| Allergic rhinitis symptoms | 6 | – |
| Self-reported perception of symptom severity | 5 | – |
Patients reporting to currently suffer from at least 3 typical rhinitis symptoms (sneezing, nasal pruritus, airflow obstruction or nasal discharge; Wheatley & Togias, 2015).
Numbers of patients with a self-reported perception of current allergic rhinitis symptoms > 3, on a likert-type scale ranging from 1 (minimal) to 5 (maximal symptom level).
Figure 1.Schematic overview of the study design and procedures.
Descriptive statistics for allergics and nonallergics in the current sample.
| Allergics ( | Nonallergics ( | χ2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | 0.022 | ||
| Male | 9 (50) | 10 (48) | |
| Female | 9 (50) | 11 (52) | |
| | |||
| Age | 25.33 (3.61) | 24.86 (2.54) | 0.482 |
| Oxytocin S1 (pg/ml) | 1187.62 (256.59) | 997.74 (230.65) | 2.335 |
| Oxytocin S2 (pg/ml) | 1118.42 (251.76) | 1027.50 (236.26) | 1.117 |
| Δ Oxytocin (pg/ml) | −69.21 (124.17) | 29.76 (189.52) | 1.853 |
| Cortisol S1 (log ng/ml) | 2.59 (0.62) | (2.69) (0.49) | −0.555 |
| Cortisol S2 (log ng/ml) | 2.83 (0.61) | 2.72 (0.59) | 0.589 |
| Cortisol S3 (log ng/ml) | 2.95 (0.52) | 2.65 (0.60) | 1.658 |
| Cortisol S4 (log ng/ml) | 2.73 (0.48) | 2.63 (0.59) | 0.535 |
| Reappraisal | 15.39 (8.42) | 18.38 (9.77) | 1.015 |
| Suppression | 18.17 (4.11) | 14.29 (4.60) | 2.761** |
| Trait Anxiety | 36.56 (9.83) | 35.19 (7.36) | 0.495 |
*p<.05; **p<.01; ***p<.001.
Figure 2.Salivary cortisol (M±SEM) responses at predefined time points before (S1) and after (S2–S4) the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) in non-allergic and allergic study participants.
Model summaries of multilevel models.
| Model 1 | Model 2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | 2.699 (0.124) | <.001 | 2.632 (0.129) | <.001 |
| Time | 0.008 (0.081) | .919 | 0.064 (0.087( | .465 |
| Time2 | −0.011 (0.025) | .668 | −0.023 (0.027) | .387 |
| Allergy | −0.119 (0.182) | .518 | −0.053 (0.182) | .774 |
| Time*Allergy | 0.379 (0.120) | .002 | 0.264 (0.135) | .053 |
| Time2*Allergy | −0.101 (0.037) | .008 | −0.061 (0.042) | .148 |
| Time*Allergy*OxyDelta | −0.035 (0.133) | .794 | ||
| Time2*Allergy*OxyDelta | 0.035 (0.042) | .410 | ||
| Time*Allergy*Reappraisal | −0.188 (0.102) | .070 | ||
| Time2*Allergy*Reappraisal | 0.075 (0.033) | .026 | ||
| Time*Allergy*Suppression | 0.051 (0.128) | .692 | ||
| Time2*Allergy*Suppression | −0.014 (0.040) | .735 | ||
| Time*Allergy*Anxiety | −0.141 (0.090) | .123 | ||
| Time2*Allergy*Anxiety | 0.057 (0.029) | .052 | ||
Figure 3.Visual analog scale measures of experienced stress (M±SEM) before (V1) and after (V2–V4) the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) in non-allergic and allergic study participants. V1 was assessed after arrival at the research facility, V2 was assessed after the TSST, V3 and V4 refer to post-stress measures following a recovery period.
Figure 4.State Anxiety measures (M ± SEM) before (Q1) and after (Q2) Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) in non-allergic and allergic study participants.