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Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 5:172-176, May 1997
© 1997 American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry
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BRIEF REPORT

Salivary Cortisol and Daily Events in Nursing Home Residents

Steven C. Samuels, M.D., Patricia M. Furlan, M.A., Alice Boyce, M.A., and Ira R. Katz, M.D., Ph.D.

Section on Geriatric Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.

The authors evaluated the feasibility of using salivary cortisol as a noninvasive measure of hypothalamic-pituitaryadrenal (HPA)-axis responses to stressful events of daily living in elderly nursing home residents. Ten medically stable male nursing home residents (age 81.7 ± 12.42) gave salivary samples before and after an assisted bath, and at corresponding times on the subsequent (control) day. Regression models, with measures of salivary cortisol on the bath and control days for two timepoints before the bath and four timepoints after the bath as the dependent variables, yielded significant effects of time, bath status, and day. Salivary cortisol testing is noninvasive and easy to collect from long-term care patients, including those with moderate degrees of dementia. It may be of use as a tool for studying the stressors associated with care, the determinants of HPA responses, and the consequences of hypercortisolemia in these vulnerable patients.




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