Source: Journal of Affective Disorders
Preprint
Date: January 29, 2020
URL:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0165032719314466
Cortisol levels in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and atypical
depression measured using hair and saliva specimens
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Andres Herane-Vives(a,b,*), Andrew Papadopoulos(a), Valeria
de Angel(a), Kia-Chong Chua(a), Lilian Soto L(c), Trudie
Chalder(a), Allan H Young(a), Anthony J Cleare(a)
a Centre for Affective Disorders, Department of Psychological
Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience,
King's College London, London, UK
b Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. University College of
London (UCL), London, UK
c Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile.
* Corresponding aithor.Centre for Affective Disorders,
Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry,
Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, 103,
Denmark Hill, London, United Kingdom, SE5 8AF, Email
andres.herane@kcl.ac.uk
Received 31 May 2019
Revised 9 December 2019
Accepted 25 January 2020
Available online 29 January 2020.
Abstract
Background
Several diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder (MDE) overlap
with those of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). Furthermore, atypical MDE
(A-MDE), a subtype of MDE characterised by profound fatigue and which
has frequently been linked with CFS, exhibits similar low cortisol
levels to CFS. However, this result has been only found in specimens
designed for measuring acute cortisol levels. In this study, we measure
cortisol levels in subjects with CFS and in subjects with atypical MDE
(A-MDE), without psychiatric comorbidity, using both hair and saliva
specimens, to gain a measure of both short and long-term cortisol levels
in these two conditions.
Methods
Hair cortisol concentration, representing the cortisol concentration of
the previous three months, and salivary cortisol, measured at six
time-points across one day and including the cortisol awakening response
(CAR), post-awakening delta cortisol and the total daily output, were
assessed in an age and gender matched group of 34 controls, 15 subjects
with A-MDE and 17 with CFS.
Results
CFS (92.2 nmol/l.h, s.d=33.2 nmol/l.h) and A-MDE (mean=89.1 nmol/l.h,
s.d=22.6 nmol/l.h) subjects both showed lower cortisol total daily
output in saliva (AUCg) in comparison to healthy controls (mean=125.5
nmol/l.h, s.d=40.6 nmol/l.h). However, hair cortisol concentration was
not lower than that of controls in either patient group. CFS and A-MDE
did not differ from one another on any cortisol measures. CFS subjects
reported fewer daily hassles and less severe psychic anxiety symptoms in
comparison to A-MDE subjects (all p<0.05). However, they did not differ
in the severity of somatic anxiety symptoms. There was also no
difference in the presence of overlapping symptoms such as fatigability
and memory problems between A-MDE and CFS subjects.
Conclusion
Low levels of cortisol found using short-term measures of daily output
may be transient, since cortisol levels were normal when a long-term
measure (hair) was studied. This might be explained by a potential
cortisol rhythm alteration. Although these disorders have their
distinctive depressive and somatic features, they may from part of a
wider group of Somatic Symptom Disorders (SSD), given the findings of
the same pattern of cortisol secretion in both disorders and increased
frequency of overlapping clinical features.
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(c) 2020 Elsevier B.V.