Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study

Abstract Background The present study investigated the relationships between psychological stress indices and oxidative stress marker, also when combined with emergent insulin resistance (IR), in the non-diabetic, middle-aged subjects, exposed to frequent/chronic psychological stressors. Methods Cro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Miroslaw Janczura, Jerzy Dropinski, Anna Gielicz, Katarzyna Kotula-Horowitz, Teresa Iwaniec, Andrzej Stanisz, Rafal Rosa, Teresa B. Domagala
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13098-020-00566-8
id doaj-45c43369155c4f328a0b742c2dbf5e6f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-45c43369155c4f328a0b742c2dbf5e6f2020-11-25T03:25:50ZengBMCDiabetology & Metabolic Syndrome1758-59962020-07-0112111110.1186/s13098-020-00566-8Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based studyMiroslaw Janczura0Jerzy Dropinski1Anna Gielicz2Katarzyna Kotula-Horowitz3Teresa Iwaniec4Andrzej Stanisz5Rafal Rosa6Teresa B. Domagala7Faculty of Health Sciences, Jagiellonian University School of MedicineDepartment of Internal Medicine, Jagiellonian University School of MedicineDepartment of Internal Medicine, Jagiellonian University School of MedicineDepartment of Internal Medicine, Health Care Centre of the Ministry of the Interior and AdministrationDepartment of Internal Medicine, Jagiellonian University School of MedicineDepartment of Bioinformatics and Telemedicine, Jagiellonian University School of MedicineDepartment of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Health Care Centre of the Ministry of the Interior and AdministrationDepartment of Medical Biochemistry, Jagiellonian University School of MedicineAbstract Background The present study investigated the relationships between psychological stress indices and oxidative stress marker, also when combined with emergent insulin resistance (IR), in the non-diabetic, middle-aged subjects, exposed to frequent/chronic psychological stressors. Methods Cross-sectional data from a cohort of non-diabetic police officers (n = 234; 19F), aged 27–56 years, were used. Plasma inflammatory (CRP, TNF-α), oxidative stress (free 8-iso-prostaglandin F2α; 8-iso-PGF2α) markers, and insulin were measured. The value of homeostasis model assessment of IR index (HOMA-IR) was assumed the threshold value of IR, i.e. 2.04. Free cortisol in urine and perceived stress (psychological stress indices) were also measured. Results In the IR subjects, most biochemical variables, inflammatory markers and urine cortisol were significantly higher, as compared to the non-IR ones. Psychological stress indices were associated with plasma 8-iso-PGF2α [B = 0.139, 95% CI (0.048, 0.230), p = 0.002, and B = 0.007, 95% CI (0.0006, 0.014), p = 0.03; for perceived stress level and cortisol, respectively]. Positive associations were established between plasma 8-iso-PGF2α [B = 0.069, 95% CI (0.016–0.120), p = 0.01] and urine cortisol [B = 0.003, 95% CI (0.0003, 0.005), p = 0.02] with HOMA-IR. Metabolic syndrome, as defined by IDF criteria, was established in 110 study subjects, whereas 136 of them were hypertensive. Waist circumference [B = 0.056, 95% CI (0.039, 0.074), p < 0.0001], and systolic blood pressure [B = 0.009, 95% CI (0.00003, 0.018), p = 0.04] were positively associated with HOMA-IR, whereas the association of HDL cholesterol [B = − 0.597, 95% CI (− 1.139, − 0.055), p = 0.03] was a negative one. Cortisol [OR = 1.007, 95% CI (1.002, 1.012), p = 0.006], and 8-iso-PGF2α [OR = 1.103, 95% CI (1.010, 1.201), p = 0.02] affected the incidence of IR. After adjustment for metabolic syndrome (or its components), age, sex, and current smoking, the effects became non-significant. Out of metabolic syndrome components, waist circumference [OR 4.966, 95% CI (2.29, 10.751), p = 0.00004] and hypertriglyceridemia [OR 1.993, 95% CI (1.063, 3.736), p = 0.03] increased the chance of IR incidence. Conclusions Both psychological stress indices were associated with oxidative stress, but only cortisol with HOMA-IR. In the subjects exposed to frequent/chronic psychological stressors, cortisol and oxidative stress marker affected IR incidence, being statistically attenuated, though, following adjustment for metabolic syndrome, or its components.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13098-020-00566-8Insulin resistancePsychological stressCortisolOxidative stress
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miroslaw Janczura
Jerzy Dropinski
Anna Gielicz
Katarzyna Kotula-Horowitz
Teresa Iwaniec
Andrzej Stanisz
Rafal Rosa
Teresa B. Domagala
spellingShingle Miroslaw Janczura
Jerzy Dropinski
Anna Gielicz
Katarzyna Kotula-Horowitz
Teresa Iwaniec
Andrzej Stanisz
Rafal Rosa
Teresa B. Domagala
Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study
Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome
Insulin resistance
Psychological stress
Cortisol
Oxidative stress
author_facet Miroslaw Janczura
Jerzy Dropinski
Anna Gielicz
Katarzyna Kotula-Horowitz
Teresa Iwaniec
Andrzej Stanisz
Rafal Rosa
Teresa B. Domagala
author_sort Miroslaw Janczura
title Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study
title_short Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study
title_full Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study
title_fullStr Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study
title_full_unstemmed Potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study
title_sort potential roles of psychological and oxidative stress in insulin resistance: a cohort-based study
publisher BMC
series Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome
issn 1758-5996
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background The present study investigated the relationships between psychological stress indices and oxidative stress marker, also when combined with emergent insulin resistance (IR), in the non-diabetic, middle-aged subjects, exposed to frequent/chronic psychological stressors. Methods Cross-sectional data from a cohort of non-diabetic police officers (n = 234; 19F), aged 27–56 years, were used. Plasma inflammatory (CRP, TNF-α), oxidative stress (free 8-iso-prostaglandin F2α; 8-iso-PGF2α) markers, and insulin were measured. The value of homeostasis model assessment of IR index (HOMA-IR) was assumed the threshold value of IR, i.e. 2.04. Free cortisol in urine and perceived stress (psychological stress indices) were also measured. Results In the IR subjects, most biochemical variables, inflammatory markers and urine cortisol were significantly higher, as compared to the non-IR ones. Psychological stress indices were associated with plasma 8-iso-PGF2α [B = 0.139, 95% CI (0.048, 0.230), p = 0.002, and B = 0.007, 95% CI (0.0006, 0.014), p = 0.03; for perceived stress level and cortisol, respectively]. Positive associations were established between plasma 8-iso-PGF2α [B = 0.069, 95% CI (0.016–0.120), p = 0.01] and urine cortisol [B = 0.003, 95% CI (0.0003, 0.005), p = 0.02] with HOMA-IR. Metabolic syndrome, as defined by IDF criteria, was established in 110 study subjects, whereas 136 of them were hypertensive. Waist circumference [B = 0.056, 95% CI (0.039, 0.074), p < 0.0001], and systolic blood pressure [B = 0.009, 95% CI (0.00003, 0.018), p = 0.04] were positively associated with HOMA-IR, whereas the association of HDL cholesterol [B = − 0.597, 95% CI (− 1.139, − 0.055), p = 0.03] was a negative one. Cortisol [OR = 1.007, 95% CI (1.002, 1.012), p = 0.006], and 8-iso-PGF2α [OR = 1.103, 95% CI (1.010, 1.201), p = 0.02] affected the incidence of IR. After adjustment for metabolic syndrome (or its components), age, sex, and current smoking, the effects became non-significant. Out of metabolic syndrome components, waist circumference [OR 4.966, 95% CI (2.29, 10.751), p = 0.00004] and hypertriglyceridemia [OR 1.993, 95% CI (1.063, 3.736), p = 0.03] increased the chance of IR incidence. Conclusions Both psychological stress indices were associated with oxidative stress, but only cortisol with HOMA-IR. In the subjects exposed to frequent/chronic psychological stressors, cortisol and oxidative stress marker affected IR incidence, being statistically attenuated, though, following adjustment for metabolic syndrome, or its components.
topic Insulin resistance
Psychological stress
Cortisol
Oxidative stress
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13098-020-00566-8
work_keys_str_mv AT miroslawjanczura potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
AT jerzydropinski potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
AT annagielicz potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
AT katarzynakotulahorowitz potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
AT teresaiwaniec potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
AT andrzejstanisz potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
AT rafalrosa potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
AT teresabdomagala potentialrolesofpsychologicalandoxidativestressininsulinresistanceacohortbasedstudy
_version_ 1724595426055684096