Salivary Cortisol Does Not Correlate with Metabolic Syndrome Markers or Subjective Stress in Overweight Children.

Journal of childhood obesity Pub Date : 2018-01-01 Epub Date: 2018-04-18 DOI:10.21767/2572-5394.100048
Robert B Strait, Marcia J Slattery, Aaron L Carrel, Jens Eickhoff, David B Allen
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Abstract

Objective: Being overweight is a risk factor for metabolic syndrome in children, but not all overweight children develop metabolic syndrome. Cortisol excess from chronic psychological stress has been proposed as an independent risk factor for metabolic syndrome in this already at-risk population. The present study assesses the relationship of biochemical and body composition radiographic markers of metabolic syndrome to salivary cortisol and self-report of chronic psychological stress in a cohort of overweight children.

Methods: This cross-sectional study took place in a multi-disciplinary pediatric obesity clinic at a tertiary care hospital, and involved fifteen children with BMI at or above the 85th percentile for age and sex, 10 of whom provided salivary cortisol samples. The main outcomes measured were salivary bedtime cortisol, first-waking cortisol, and cortisol awakening response (CAR-the rise in cortisol in the first half hour after waking); fasting serum triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, glucose and insulin for HOMA-IR; the ratio of abdominal fat to total body fat by DXA scan; and scores of validated stress and bullying questionnaires (PANAS-C, PSS, and SEC-Q).

Results: In this pilot study, no correlation was found between salivary cortisol measures and questionnaire scores of subjective stress or bullying, and no correlation was found between any of these measures and markers of metabolic syndrome (dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, increased abdominal fat).

Conclusions: These results suggest that measures of psychological stress, whether biochemical or subjective, do not appear to predict risk of metabolic syndrome in overweight children. While ease of collection and demonstrated utility both in detection of pediatric Cushing disease and in adult psychological research make salivary cortisol assessment an attractive clinical tool, further investigation into the value of salivary measures in pediatric stress research is needed.

超重儿童唾液皮质醇与代谢综合征指标或主观压力无关
目的:超重是儿童患代谢综合征的一个风险因素,但并非所有超重儿童都会患代谢综合征。慢性心理压力导致的皮质醇过多已被认为是这一高危人群患代谢综合征的独立风险因素。本研究评估了一组超重儿童的代谢综合征生化指标和身体成分影像学指标与唾液皮质醇和慢性心理压力自我报告之间的关系:这项横断面研究在一家三甲医院的多学科儿科肥胖症门诊进行,15 名儿童的体重指数达到或超过年龄和性别的第 85 百分位数,其中 10 名儿童提供了唾液皮质醇样本。测量的主要结果包括:唾液皮质醇睡前水平、皮质醇初醒水平和皮质醇觉醒反应(CAR--皮质醇在睡醒后前半小时内的上升);空腹血清甘油三酯、高密度脂蛋白胆固醇、葡萄糖和胰岛素(HOMA-IR);DXA扫描显示的腹部脂肪与身体总脂肪的比率;以及有效的压力和欺凌问卷(PANAS-C、PSS和SEC-Q)得分:在这项试点研究中,没有发现唾液皮质醇测量值与主观压力或欺凌问卷得分之间存在相关性,也没有发现这些测量值与代谢综合征指标(血脂异常、胰岛素抵抗、腹部脂肪增加)之间存在相关性:这些结果表明,心理压力测量值,无论是生化测量值还是主观测量值,似乎都不能预测超重儿童患代谢综合征的风险。虽然唾液皮质醇评估易于收集,而且在检测小儿库欣病和成人心理研究中都证明很有用,因此是一种很有吸引力的临床工具,但仍需进一步调查唾液测量在小儿压力研究中的价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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