4.5 Article

Salivary uric acid reactivity and baseline associations with physiological stress response

Journal

PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2022.105948

Keywords

Uric acid; Cortisol; Pre-ejection period; Heart Rate Variability; Stress reactivity; Saliva

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The study measured physiological responses to acute physical pain stress and found that uric acid concentrations increased following the cold pressor task, with higher levels associated with increased cortisol concentrations. The findings underline the potential role of the purinergic system in stress responses and its implications for understanding interactions with other physiological systems.
Uric acid, an end product of the purinergic system, plays a role in several physiological systems that are responsive to stress. However, few studies have examined whether (1) uric acid concentrations change in response to acute stress, and (2) there are cross-system associations where uric acid might influence other physiological system responses to acute physical stress. The present study measured indices of the purinergic, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, sympathetic, and parasympathetic systems (uric acid, cortisol, pre-ejection period, and root mean square of successive differences, respectively) in response to a standardized acute physical pain stressor, the cold pressor task. A diverse sample of participants (n = 67; mean age = 20.5 years, 52% female; 48% male) from a larger study completed anthropometric measurements and took part in a room temperature water task followed by the cold pressor task and sociodemographic questionnaires. Throughout the study, electrocardiography and impedance cardiography were measured continuously, and five saliva samples were collected that were later assayed for cortisol and uric acid. Descriptively, uric acid increased about 32 min following completion of the cold pressor. Resting uric acid concentrations were not associated with the auto-nomic nervous system response, but higher resting uric acid concentrations were associated with increased cortisol concentrations. Future research should examine the extent to which the purinergic system influences, and is influenced by, other types of stress and other physiological systems. The current findings highlight the potential role of an understudied biomarker and physiological system in the stress literature and have impli-cations for basic and mechanistic researchers who study psychoneuroendocrinology, stress, and health.

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