AI Article Synopsis

  • The nervous system interacts with the immune system through neuropeptides, especially during stress responses.
  • This study examined salivary neuropeptide levels (like oxytocin and β-Endorphin) in fire recruits undergoing a stress training exercise, finding that levels increased during stress and recovery.
  • Higher salivary neuropeptide levels were correlated with greater self-assessed hardiness, suggesting a link between neuropeptide activity and stress resilience, which may be relevant for high-stress jobs like firefighting.

Article Abstract

Once thought of as an immune-privileged site, we now know that the nervous system communicates in a bidirectional manner with the immune system via the neuroimmune axis. Neuropeptides constitute a component of this axis, playing critical roles in the brain and periphery. The function of salivary neuropeptides in the acute stress response is not well understood. The purpose of this study is to investigate salivary neuropeptide levels during acute stress. Salivary samples were collected from fire recruits engaged in a stress training exercise previously shown to induce acute stress, at three separate timepoints during the exercise and levels of oxytocin, neurotensin, Substance P, α-MSH, and β-Endorphin were measured using the Human Neuropeptide 5-Plex Custom Assay Eve Technologies. All neuropeptides increased throughout the acute stress simulation and during the recovery phase. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) identified one factor contributing to baseline values across five neuropeptides and Pairwise Pearson Correlation Coefficient analysis showed positive correlations >0.9 for almost all neuropeptide combinations at the pre-stress timepoint. Further analysis identified negative and positive correlations between past-life trauma and self-assessed hardiness, respectively. Calculated neuropeptide scores showed an overall positive correlation to self-assessed hardiness. Altogether, our results suggest that salivary neuropeptides increase synchronously during acute stress and higher levels correlate with an increase in self-assessed hardiness. Further study is required to determine if interventions designed to enhance neuropeptide activity can increase stress resilience, especially in high-stress occupations such as firefighting.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11119501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14050492DOI Listing

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