Covariance between psychological and endocrine responses to pharmacological challenge and psychosocial stress: a question of timing
Covariance between psychological and endocrine responses to pharmacological challenge and psychosocial stress: a question of timing
Objective: To test if the covariance of hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and subjective-psychological responses to stress is dependent on different dynamics of these systems. Although stress theories typically assume substantial correlations of psychological and endocrine stress responses, studies have produced inconsistent results. One reason for this might be imperfect coupling of the different stress response systems. However, inconsistent correlations might also be a result of different on-/offsets of these stress responses, i.e., specific dynamics of the systems.
Methods: HPA axis indicators and subjective-psychological states were repeatedly and synchronously measured in a pharmacological challenge test (injection of corticotropin-releasing hormone and infusion of arginine vasopressin; Study 1; n = 42) and a psychosocial stress situation (Trier Social Stress Test; Study 2; n = 219). Cross-correlation analysis was used to test for lag effects in HPA axis reactivity and psychoendocrine responses.
Results: Analyses revealed high cross-correlations of adrenocorticotropic hormone with cortisol responses (up to r = .80 in Study 1 and r = .56 in Study 2) and positive associations of psychological with endocrine stress responses (up to r = .48 in Study 1 and r = .54 in Study 2) at nonzero lags. Subjective-psychological responses preceded HPA axis responses. Moreover, high levels of cortisol were associated with lower later levels of anxiety and activation.
Conclusions: The findings suggest that psychoendocrine stress responses are more closely coupled than previous studies suggested. Due to different dynamics of the systems, endocrine responses lag behind psychological responses.
cortisol, hpa axis, anxiety, activation, stress, covariance
787-796
Schlotz, Wolff
49499d5e-4ff4-4ad3-b5f7-eec11b25b5db
Kumsta, Robert
88285030-6a7c-4ef1-ba75-b78e09cd2f1e
Layes, Irmgard
fe5ca9f2-376a-4691-a14e-7b395f51a611
Entringer, Sonja
f96a0401-9da9-4f00-aada-b6a3569501ba
Jones, Alexander
6db57b28-bd86-40c4-a3ff-d28ea5e286e4
Wüst, Stefan
530861ea-05ba-4a73-8030-9735f1759d5b
September 2008
Schlotz, Wolff
49499d5e-4ff4-4ad3-b5f7-eec11b25b5db
Kumsta, Robert
88285030-6a7c-4ef1-ba75-b78e09cd2f1e
Layes, Irmgard
fe5ca9f2-376a-4691-a14e-7b395f51a611
Entringer, Sonja
f96a0401-9da9-4f00-aada-b6a3569501ba
Jones, Alexander
6db57b28-bd86-40c4-a3ff-d28ea5e286e4
Wüst, Stefan
530861ea-05ba-4a73-8030-9735f1759d5b
Schlotz, Wolff, Kumsta, Robert, Layes, Irmgard, Entringer, Sonja, Jones, Alexander and Wüst, Stefan
(2008)
Covariance between psychological and endocrine responses to pharmacological challenge and psychosocial stress: a question of timing.
Psychosomatic Medicine, 70 (7), .
(doi:10.1097/PSY.0b013e3181810658).
Abstract
Objective: To test if the covariance of hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and subjective-psychological responses to stress is dependent on different dynamics of these systems. Although stress theories typically assume substantial correlations of psychological and endocrine stress responses, studies have produced inconsistent results. One reason for this might be imperfect coupling of the different stress response systems. However, inconsistent correlations might also be a result of different on-/offsets of these stress responses, i.e., specific dynamics of the systems.
Methods: HPA axis indicators and subjective-psychological states were repeatedly and synchronously measured in a pharmacological challenge test (injection of corticotropin-releasing hormone and infusion of arginine vasopressin; Study 1; n = 42) and a psychosocial stress situation (Trier Social Stress Test; Study 2; n = 219). Cross-correlation analysis was used to test for lag effects in HPA axis reactivity and psychoendocrine responses.
Results: Analyses revealed high cross-correlations of adrenocorticotropic hormone with cortisol responses (up to r = .80 in Study 1 and r = .56 in Study 2) and positive associations of psychological with endocrine stress responses (up to r = .48 in Study 1 and r = .54 in Study 2) at nonzero lags. Subjective-psychological responses preceded HPA axis responses. Moreover, high levels of cortisol were associated with lower later levels of anxiety and activation.
Conclusions: The findings suggest that psychoendocrine stress responses are more closely coupled than previous studies suggested. Due to different dynamics of the systems, endocrine responses lag behind psychological responses.
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Submitted date: 1 February 2008
Published date: September 2008
Keywords:
cortisol, hpa axis, anxiety, activation, stress, covariance
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 52583
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/52583
ISSN: 0033-3174
PURE UUID: d32dd854-ea26-42c6-a68e-7f21f9566618
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Date deposited: 10 Jul 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:37
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Contributors
Author:
Wolff Schlotz
Author:
Robert Kumsta
Author:
Irmgard Layes
Author:
Sonja Entringer
Author:
Alexander Jones
Author:
Stefan Wüst
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