Gibson, EL and Checkley, S and Papadopoulos, A and Poon, L and Daley, S and Wardle, J (1999) Increased salivary cortisol reliably induced by a protein-rich midday meal. PSYCHOSOM MED , 61 (2) 214 - 224.
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Abstract
Objective: This study was conducted to determine whether an increase in salivary free cortisol would be reliably elicited by a midday meal, thus providing a convenient physiological challenge to the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and whether this cortisol release depended on the protein content of the meal. Method: In healthy men, free cortisol was measured in saliva samples taken before and after two identical protein-rich midday meals (39% energy as protein) and compared with a day on which no meal was eaten. Next, in healthy women in a nonclinical setting, salivary cortisol was measured before and after a protein-rich meal (32% energy as protein) on one day and a low-protein meal (5% energy as protein) on another day. Measures of mood, appetite, and psychological well-being were also taken. Results: An acute meal-dependent increase in salivary cortisol occurred, which was reliable over 2 test days. This increase in cortisol depended on the proportion of protein in the meal, increasing after the high-protein but not the low-protein meal. The extent of this increase in cortisol correlated significantly with poor psychological well-being in women. Some postmeal improvement of mood (positive affect) was associated with the high- but not the low-protein meal. Conclusions: The cortisol response to meals may have implications for the effects of meal composition on mood, cognitive function, and food choice. The measurement of free cortisol in saliva provides a psychologically stress-free and reliable technique to assess the cortisol response to a standard protein-rich meal, ie, a physiological challenge to the HPA axis in men and women that could be investigated in naturalistic settings outside the laboratory.
| Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Title: | Increased salivary cortisol reliably induced by a protein-rich midday meal |
| Keywords: | cortisol, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, protein, nutrition, appetite, saliva, AMINO-ACIDS, PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS, PLASMA-CORTISOL, CARBOHYDRATE, RESPONSES, MOOD, PERFORMANCE, APPETITE, BEHAVIOR, HORMONE |
| UCL classification: | UCL > School of Life and Medical Sciences > Faculty of Population Health Sciences > Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care |
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