Authors
Gregory E Miller, Sheldon Cohen, Sarah Pressman, Anita Barkin, Bruce S Rabin, John J Treanor
Publication date
2004/3/1
Journal
Psychosomatic medicine
Volume
66
Issue
2
Pages
215-223
Publisher
LWW
Description
Objectives
This study attempted to determine whether stress of moderate intensity could modulate the antibody response to an influenza vaccination in healthy young adults, identify critical periods during which stress could influence antibody response, and delineate behavioral and biological pathways that might explain relations between stress and antibody.
Methods
A cohort of 83 healthy young adults underwent 13 days of ambulatory monitoring before, during, and after vaccination. Four times daily, subjects reported the extent to which they felt stressed and overwhelmed and collected a saliva sample that was later used to measure cortisol. A battery of health practices (cigarette smoking, alcohol use, physical activity, sleep hygiene) was assessed daily. Antibody titers to the vaccine components were measured at baseline and at 1-month and 4-month follow-up assessments.
Total citations
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