Authors
A Schmidt-Reinwald, JC Pruessner, DH Hellhammer, I Federenko, N Rohleder, TH Schürmeyer, Clemens Kirschbaum
Publication date
1999/3/26
Journal
Life sciences
Volume
64
Issue
18
Pages
1653-1660
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Recent studies have shown that cortisol levels rapidly increase within the first 30 minutes after awakening. This response is rather robust over weeks or months and is altered by chronic stress and burnout. The present study investigated to what extent the cortisol response to awakening relates to responses following hCRH, ACTH1–24, or psychosocial stress challenges in 22 healthy subjects. Furthermore, a 12-hour circadian cortisol profile was obtained to compare the morning response with cortisol levels obtained throughout the day. Results show that the morning cortisol response was of similar magnitude to that following injection of 1 μg/kg h-CRH or exposure to a brief psychosocial Stressor (TSST). All of these were significantly smaller compared to maximal stimulation of the adrenal cortex by ACTH1–24. Correlation analyses revealed that the morning cortisol response was closely related only to the cortisol …
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