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Relations of combat stress and posttraumatic stress disorder to 24-h plasma and cerebrospinal fluid interleukin-6 levels and circadian rhythmicity

Authors :
Dewleen G. Baker
Uzair Haji
Imanuel Lerman
Clara Snijders
Agorastos Agorastos
Thomas D. Geracioti
George P. Chrousos
Tobias Moeller-Bertram
Piyush M. Patel
Donald A. Barkauskas
Richard L. Hauger
Promovendi MHN
RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience
Source :
Psychoneuroendocrinology, 100, 237-245. Elsevier Science
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier Science, 2019.

Abstract

Background: Acute and chronic stress can lead to a dysregulation of the immune response. Growing evidence suggests peripheral immune dysregulation and low-grade systemic inflammation in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), with numerous reports of elevated plasma interleukin-6 (IL-6) levels. However, only a few studies have assessed IL-6 levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Most of those have used single time-point measurements, and thus cannot take circadian level variability and CSF-plasma IL-6 correlations into account.Methods: This study used time-matched, sequential 24-h plasma and CSF measurements to investigate the effects of combat stress and PTSD on physiologic levels and biorhythmicity of IL-6 in 35 male study volunteers, divided in 3 groups: (PTSD = 12, combat controls, CC = 12, and non-deployed healthy controls, HC = 11).Results: Our findings show no differences in diurnal mean concentrations of plasma and CSF IL-6 across the three comparison groups. However, a significantly blunted circadian rhythm of plasma IL-6 across 24 h was observed in all combat-zone deployed participants, with or without PTSD, in comparison to HC. CSF IL-6 rhythmicity was unaffected by combat deployment or PTSD.Conclusions: Although no significant group differences in mean IL-6 concentration in either CSF or plasma over a 24-h timeframe was observed, we provide first evidence for a disrupted peripheral IL-6 circadian rhythm as a sequel of combat deployment, with this disruption occurring in both PTSD and CC groups. The plasma IL-6 circadian blunting remains to be replicated and its cause elucidated in future research.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03064530
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychoneuroendocrinology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....22eab31b9776e6a63aeecda90b856e48