Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.

Animal models have shown that chronic stress increases cortisol, which contributes to overeating of highly palatable food, increased abdominal fat and lower cortisol reactivity. Few studies in humans have simultaneously examined these trajectories. We examined premenopausal women, either mothers of...

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Main Authors: Rachel M Radin, Ashley E Mason, Mark L Laudenslager, Elissa S Epel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216541
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spelling doaj-5317e30ae37b4951aa43ead875e4512b2021-03-04T11:23:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01145e021654110.1371/journal.pone.0216541Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.Rachel M RadinAshley E MasonMark L LaudenslagerElissa S EpelAnimal models have shown that chronic stress increases cortisol, which contributes to overeating of highly palatable food, increased abdominal fat and lower cortisol reactivity. Few studies in humans have simultaneously examined these trajectories. We examined premenopausal women, either mothers of children with a diagnosis of an autism spectrum disorder (n = 92) or mothers of neurotypical children (n = 91). At baseline and 2-years, we assessed hair cortisol, metabolic health, and reward-based eating. We compared groups cross-sectionally and prospectively, accounting for BMI change. Caregivers, relative to controls, had lower cumulative hair cortisol at each time point, with no decreases over time. Caregivers also had stable levels of poor metabolic functioning and greater reward-based eating across both time points, and evidenced increased abdominal fat prospectively (all ps ≤.05), independent of change in BMI. This pattern of findings suggest that individuals under chronic stress, such as caregivers, would benefit from tailored interventions focusing on better regulation of stress and eating in tandem to prevent early onset of metabolic disease, regardless of weight status.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216541
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rachel M Radin
Ashley E Mason
Mark L Laudenslager
Elissa S Epel
spellingShingle Rachel M Radin
Ashley E Mason
Mark L Laudenslager
Elissa S Epel
Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rachel M Radin
Ashley E Mason
Mark L Laudenslager
Elissa S Epel
author_sort Rachel M Radin
title Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.
title_short Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.
title_full Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.
title_fullStr Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.
title_full_unstemmed Maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.
title_sort maternal caregivers have confluence of altered cortisol, high reward-driven eating, and worse metabolic health.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Animal models have shown that chronic stress increases cortisol, which contributes to overeating of highly palatable food, increased abdominal fat and lower cortisol reactivity. Few studies in humans have simultaneously examined these trajectories. We examined premenopausal women, either mothers of children with a diagnosis of an autism spectrum disorder (n = 92) or mothers of neurotypical children (n = 91). At baseline and 2-years, we assessed hair cortisol, metabolic health, and reward-based eating. We compared groups cross-sectionally and prospectively, accounting for BMI change. Caregivers, relative to controls, had lower cumulative hair cortisol at each time point, with no decreases over time. Caregivers also had stable levels of poor metabolic functioning and greater reward-based eating across both time points, and evidenced increased abdominal fat prospectively (all ps ≤.05), independent of change in BMI. This pattern of findings suggest that individuals under chronic stress, such as caregivers, would benefit from tailored interventions focusing on better regulation of stress and eating in tandem to prevent early onset of metabolic disease, regardless of weight status.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216541
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