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Journal Article

Citation

Sundberg N, Millis RM. Cureus 2023; 15(4): e37504.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Curēus)

DOI

10.7759/cureus.37504

PMID

37064725

PMCID

PMC10101191

Abstract

Seventy percent of US firefighters are overweight or obese. The combination of sleep deprivation and exposure to traumatic events during 72-hour work shifts, commonly employed in emergency responders, is thought to put firefighters at high risk for a variety of stress-related diseases and suicide. Previous studies suggest that the cortisol awakening response (CAR) may be increased in sleep-deprived emergency responders. This case series was designed to investigate the variations in CAR and associations with measurements of salivary cortisol and testosterone, blood glucose and triglyceride, and blood pressure during a 72-hour work shift. Measurements were made at 08:00 and 20:00 in five participants (one normal weight normotensive, three obese hypertensive, and one morbidly obese normotensive male). Data were characterized by the regression statistic R(2) computed from the relationship between diurnal measurement and concentration, with significance at R(2)≥0.4. The predominant AM CAR adaptation response consisted of no significant 72-h change (flat response) in salivary cortisol (R(2)<0.4), found in three of the five participants (60%). The normal-weight participant's 72-h AM CAR adaptation was characterized as incremental (R(2)=0.91), and markedly different than that of the four obese firefighters who exhibited either a flat response (R(2)<0.4, 60%) or, in one subject, a decremental response (R(2)=0.40, 20%). The predominant 72-h PM cortisol adaptation was found to be decremental (R(2)=0.78-0.97) in three of the five participants (60%), including the normal weight subject (R(2)=0.78). Diurnal salivary cortisol and testosterone exhibited normal physiological circadian variations (P=0.01, AM>PM and P=0.1, AM>PM, respectively). Blood glucose and triglyceride also showed physiological circadian variations (P=0.02 AM

Language: en

Keywords

obesity; sleep deprivation; circadian rhythm; diurnal variation; fire fighters; salivary cortisol

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