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Associations between stress biology indicators and overweight across toddlerhood.

Citation
Miller, A. L., et al. “Associations Between Stress Biology Indicators And Overweight Across Toddlerhood.”. Psychoneuroendocrinology, pp. 98-106.
Center University of Michigan
Author Alison L Miller, Niko Kaciroti, Julie Sturza, Lauren Retzloff, Katherine Rosenblum, Delia M Vazquez, Julie C Lumeng
Keywords Child, Cortisol, Low-income, obesity, Salivary alpha-amylase (sAA), Stress
Abstract

Biological stress responses are proposed as a pathway through which stress exposure can "get under the skin" and lead to health problems, specifically obesity. Yet, it is not clear when such associations may emerge or whether they are bidirectional. Cortisol and salivary alpha amylase (sAA) were considered indicators of the biological stress response. We tested the longitudinal association between cortisol and sAA and weight in 215 low-income children at ages 21, 27, and 33 months (52% male; 46% non-Hispanic white). sAA and cortisol intercept and slope (representing morning level and rate of change across the day) were calculated for each age point using random effect models. Children were weighed and length measured and categorized as overweight versus normal weight (overweight defined as weight-for-length z-score ≥85th percentile for age and sex). Cross-lagged models stratified by sex and controlling for birthweight z-score tested the concurrent and cross-lagged associations between each of 4 indices of stress biology individually (cortisol and sAA intercept and slope) and overweight. Overweight status was correlated across time. Cortisol and sAA were correlated across occasions of measurement, though somewhat less strongly in boys. There were no concurrent associations between stress indicators and overweight. sAA at 27 months predicted greater risk of overweight at 33 months in girls, such that both lower sAA intercept and more rapidly increasing sAA at 27 months predicted greater risk of overweight at 33 months (β=-0.64, p<0.05 and β=1.09, p<0.05, respectively). For boys only, overweight at 21 months predicted lower sAA intercept at 27 months (β=-0.35, p<0.05). Findings suggest that longitudinal associations of stress biology and weight status may be present only on a limited basis very early in the lifespan.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Psychoneuroendocrinology
Volume
79
Number of Pages
98-106
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1873-3360
DOI
10.1016/j.psyneuen.2017.02.013
Alternate Journal
Psychoneuroendocrinology
PMID
28273588
PMCID
PMC5367941
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