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The Relationship Between Salivary Secretory Immunoglobulin A and Cortisol: Neuroendocrine Response to Awakening and the Diurnal Cycle

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 1999 Feb 6
PMID 9934622
Citations 43
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Abstract

The level of secretory immunoglobulin A (sIgA) measured in saliva is downregulated during periods of chronic stress. In contrast, the response to an acute stress challenge is a transient increase. The process of awakening is associated with stress neuroendocrine activation characterised by increases in salivary cortisol. We therefore examined if this period of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) activation was associated with changes in salivary sIgA. Associations of sIgA with the diurnal cortisol cycle were also investigated in a separate study. The awakening cortisol response was measured in 30 healthy day-active young adults. There was a marked elevation from the first awakening level over the succeeding 30 min. SIgA showed the opposite response with a marked fall from the highest first awakening concentration in the same samples over the same period. The cortisol rise was significantly correlated with the sIgA fall (r = 0.42). Salivary sIgA showed a similar diurnal cycle to cortisol in a study on eight healthy young adults. An early morning acrophase was followed by a decline to a stable base some 6 h after awakening. The physiological significance of these relationships and possible implications for vulnerability to infection are discussed.

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