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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter September 9, 2011

Correlation of cortisol in 1-cm hair segment with salivary cortisol in human: hair cortisol as an endogenous biomarker

  • Qiaozhen Xie , Wei Gao , Jifeng Li , Ting Qiao , Jing Jin , Huihua Deng EMAIL logo and Zuhong Lu

Abstract

Background: Cortisol level in human hair would be an endogenous biomarker for the retrospective assessment of long-term central hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal activity. However, no direct evidence supports that blood-related diffusion is a biologically endogenous source of hair cortisol in humans. The present study aims to validate the direct correlation between cortisol in 1-cm hair segments and salivary cortisol in healthy humans.

Methods: We collected three saliva samples from the same participant at Time 1, Time 2 (1 week later) and Time 3 (2 weeks later), and hair 4 weeks later. Cortisol levels in 1-cm hair segments and saliva were determined with high performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry.

Results: Salivary cortisol at Time 1 was significantly associated with that at Time 2 (r=0.514, p=0.003), but not with that at Time 3 (r=0.187, p=0.305); and the one at Time 2 was significantly associated with that at Time 3 (r=0.380, p=0.032). Hair cortisol was significantly correlated with salivary cortisol at Time 2 (r=0.389, p<0.05) and average salivary cortisol (r=0.383, p<0.05) from three sampling.

Conclusions: Our results confirmed that blood-related diffusion mechanism is a biologically endogenous source of hair cortisol.


Corresponding author: Dr. Huihua Deng, Key Laboratory of Child Development and Learning Science (Southeast University), Ministry of Education, Research Center of Learning Science, Southeast University, Nanjing 210096, P.R. China Phone: +86-25-83795664, Fax: +86-25-83793779

Received: 2011-5-22
Accepted: 2011-8-11
Published Online: 2011-9-9
Published in Print: 2011-12-1

©2011 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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