Title of article :
The relationship between serum cortisol, adrenaline, blood glucose and lipid profile of undergraduate students under examination stress
Author/Authors :
Maduka, Ignatius C Nnamdi Azikiwe University - Human Biochemistry, Nigeria , Neboh, Emeka E University of Science and Technology - College of Medicine - Department of Medical Biochemistry, Nigeria , Ufelle, Silas A University of Nigeria - Medical Laboratory Sciences, Nigeria
From page :
131
To page :
136
Abstract :
Background: Stress is an extremely adaptive phenomenon in human beings and cortisol is a known stress hormone. Examination has been described as a naturalistic stressor capable of affecting human health. Objectives: To estimate the relationship between serum cortisol, adrenaline, fasting blood glucose (FBG) and lipid profile during examination stress. Methods: Two hundred and eight (208) apparently-healthy undergraduate students (aged, 24 ± 6 years) were involved in the study. Exactly 5 mls of venous blood was collected from each subject 1-3 hours before a major examination. A second assessment was done on the same students 3-4 weeks before any examination (control samples). Cortisol and adrenaline were assayed using ELISA techniques, FBG was assayed using enzymatic method while lipid parameters were assayed using standard enzymatic- spectrophotometric methods. Results: There was statistically significant increase in serum cortisol, adrenaline, Total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol levels in students under examination stress compared to the non examination period (p=0.001, 0.013, 0.0001, 0.0001 and 0.0001, respectively). FBG showed no significant increase. There was also significant positive correlation (r=0.297, p=0.032) between serum cortisol and TC/HDL ratio (cardiac risk factor) before examination stress but not during the stress period. Conclusions: Significant positive correlation was observed between cortisol and TC/HDL ratio before examination stress.
Keywords :
academic examination , stressors , cortisol , lipid profile
Journal title :
African Health Sciences
Journal title :
African Health Sciences
Record number :
2634504
Link To Document :
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