Authors
Aoife O’Donovan, Brian M Hughes, George M Slavich, Lydia Lynch, Marie-Therese Cronin, Cliona O’Farrelly, Kevin M Malone
Publication date
2010/10/31
Journal
Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
Volume
24
Issue
7
Pages
1074-1077
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Anxiety confers increased risk for inflammatory diseases, and elevated inflammatory activity in anxious individuals may contribute to this increased risk. One complication, however, is that anxiety could be associated with inflammatory activity either through a specific anxiety pathway or through a more general negative emotionality pathway. To investigate, we measured levels of the stress hormone cortisol, the pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6), and the systemic inflammatory marker C-reactive protein (CRP), as well as depression and neuroticism, in clinically anxious and non-anxious adults. Compared with non-anxious participants, clinically anxious participants exhibited significantly lower levels of morning cortisol and significantly higher levels of IL-6, independent of age, sex, and depressive symptoms. These group differences were robust when controlling for neuroticism. Conversely, the groups had …
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