International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology
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Int J Psychophysiol · Apr 2013
Blunted salivary and plasma cortisol response in patients with panic disorder under psychosocial stress.
Panic disorder (PD) has been associated with an altered activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-cortical (HPA) axis. Recent findings from a patient sample with PD with secondary depression on psychotropic medication using salivary cortisol as outcome measure suggest a non-responsiveness of the HPA-axis under acute psychosocial stress. Salivary cortisol does not necessarily reflect the total plasma cortisol due to interfering variables. Whether the present findings can be replicated on a patient sample with pure PD using both salivary cortisol and total plasma cortisol as outcome variables remains to be elucidated. ⋯ These findings provide strong evidence for a hypo-responsiveness of the HPA-axis as measured in both blood and saliva. Salivary and total plasma cortisol showed a strong concordance of results. Thus, future investigations could consider salivary cortisol as reliable marker of the HPA-axis under psychosocial stress.