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Diurnal cortisol patterns of young male patients with schizophrenia

Diurnal cortisol patterns of young male patients with schizophrenia
Diurnal cortisol patterns of young male patients with schizophrenia
Aims: it has been suggested that schizophrenic patients are more vulnerable to stress than healthy persons, and that stressors can trigger a psychotic episode or worsen symptoms. The biological system often studied in relation to stress is the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis, which controls the release of cortisol. We investigated whether the diurnal basal activity of the HPA axis differed between young male patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls.

Methods: twenty-seven male patients (mean age 22 ± 5 years) and 38 healthy male control subjects (mean age 22 ± 3 years) were included in the present study. Saliva was sampled at five time points during the day: directly after awakening, 30 min thereafter, and at 12.00 hours, 16.00 hours and 22.00 hours.

Results: the cortisol concentration decreased significantly more during the day in the patient group thanin the control group. Patients also showed a significantly decreased area under the curve with respect to the increase, again indicating that the cortisol concentrations decreased more during the day in patients than in controls. Both the morning increase and the area under the curve with respect to the increase were significantly negatively correlated with negative symptom severity.

Conclusions: patients with schizophrenia showed a different daytime sensitivity of the HPA axis. Our findings further suggest that an increase in negative symptom severity is related to a decreased HPA axis sensitivity
biological psychiatry, psychoneuroendocrinology, schizophrenia
1323-1316
548-554
Hempel, Roelie J.
2dfa9856-74dd-49b5-86e6-f78eace6727f
Tulen, Joke H. M.
bd2db0ea-d0bd-4de4-8a33-1a005400c3f2
Van Beveren, Nico J. M.
d3743dd7-9d82-4dd4-baf7-2071849001fe
Röder, Christian H.
f2f6451c-8218-4427-916e-ae215e0f1086
De Jong, Frank H.
7dedfbb1-1fe9-44b2-9f76-daba6fe90a65
Hengeveld, Michiel W.
8cd0291b-0b0c-4513-8e0b-270c1a78102f
Hempel, Roelie J.
2dfa9856-74dd-49b5-86e6-f78eace6727f
Tulen, Joke H. M.
bd2db0ea-d0bd-4de4-8a33-1a005400c3f2
Van Beveren, Nico J. M.
d3743dd7-9d82-4dd4-baf7-2071849001fe
Röder, Christian H.
f2f6451c-8218-4427-916e-ae215e0f1086
De Jong, Frank H.
7dedfbb1-1fe9-44b2-9f76-daba6fe90a65
Hengeveld, Michiel W.
8cd0291b-0b0c-4513-8e0b-270c1a78102f

Hempel, Roelie J., Tulen, Joke H. M., Van Beveren, Nico J. M., Röder, Christian H., De Jong, Frank H. and Hengeveld, Michiel W. (2010) Diurnal cortisol patterns of young male patients with schizophrenia. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 64 (5), 548-554. (doi:10.1111/j.1440-1819.2010.02121.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aims: it has been suggested that schizophrenic patients are more vulnerable to stress than healthy persons, and that stressors can trigger a psychotic episode or worsen symptoms. The biological system often studied in relation to stress is the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis, which controls the release of cortisol. We investigated whether the diurnal basal activity of the HPA axis differed between young male patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls.

Methods: twenty-seven male patients (mean age 22 ± 5 years) and 38 healthy male control subjects (mean age 22 ± 3 years) were included in the present study. Saliva was sampled at five time points during the day: directly after awakening, 30 min thereafter, and at 12.00 hours, 16.00 hours and 22.00 hours.

Results: the cortisol concentration decreased significantly more during the day in the patient group thanin the control group. Patients also showed a significantly decreased area under the curve with respect to the increase, again indicating that the cortisol concentrations decreased more during the day in patients than in controls. Both the morning increase and the area under the curve with respect to the increase were significantly negatively correlated with negative symptom severity.

Conclusions: patients with schizophrenia showed a different daytime sensitivity of the HPA axis. Our findings further suggest that an increase in negative symptom severity is related to a decreased HPA axis sensitivity

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More information

Published date: October 2010
Keywords: biological psychiatry, psychoneuroendocrinology, schizophrenia

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Local EPrints ID: 193007
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/193007
ISSN: 1323-1316
PURE UUID: 3c22d74f-5213-41bd-bc7c-506096b254bc

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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2011 11:52
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 03:53

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Contributors

Author: Roelie J. Hempel
Author: Joke H. M. Tulen
Author: Nico J. M. Van Beveren
Author: Christian H. Röder
Author: Frank H. De Jong
Author: Michiel W. Hengeveld

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