4.5 Article

Impact of hair type, hair sample weight, external hair exposures, and race on cumulative hair cortisol

期刊

PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
卷 142, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2022.105805

关键词

Hair cortisol; Hair hormone methodology; Race; Hair typing system

资金

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health [R00HD093798]
  2. US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2015-68001-23248]
  3. Vice President for Extension and Outreach at Iowa State University [R01 DA045108. 4/1/2018-1/31/2023]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examines the impact of factors such as hair type, race, and outdoor exposure on cumulative hair cortisol concentrations. The results demonstrate the influence of hair sample weight, external exposure, and hair type on cortisol levels. Additionally, differences in cumulative cortisol were found between different racial groups and various hair types. These findings highlight the importance of considering hair type and race when measuring hair cortisol in future studies.
The biomarker cortisol assesses the impact of biopsychosocial stressors that activate the stress response system. Hair has emerged as a valid and non-invasive means of gauging cumulative cortisol deposited over month-long periods of time. Established protocols for the extraction of hair cortisol are being validated and refined in humans, yet methodological information about hair characteristics on cortisol remains limited. In addition to external hair exposures (e.g. dye, time spent outside), we examined hair categorization or type (e.g. kinky, straight) by extending a hair typing methodology for scientific use that is currently popular among hair care professionals. We then examined the interaction between hair type and race on cortisol levels with a hair questionnaire. Three studies were pooled to investigate how sample weight, hair type, race, heat exposures, and hair treatments impacted cumulative hair cortisol concentrations. Study 1 consisted of Adult Kenyan Medical Workers (N = 44); Study 2 Mexican and Mexican Americans (N = 106); and Study 3 American Youth (N = 107). We found significantly higher cortisol in 5 mg of hair when compared to larger sample weights, and higher cortisol in those who spent more time outdoors. Cortisol concentrations differed between racial groups and varied by hair type; moreover, there were directional differences in cumulative cortisol from straighter to curlier hair types which depended on racial group. In addition to demonstrating the impact of relatively novel control factors like hair sample weight, outdoor exposure, and hair type, the present study illustrates the importance of disentangling hair type and race to understand variability in cumulative hair cortisol. These influences should be included in future studies that measure hair cortisol.

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