Author:
KLIMES–DOUGAN BONNIE,HASTINGS PAUL D.,GRANGER DOUGLAS A.,USHER BARBARA A.,ZAHN–WAXLER CAROLYN
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine adrenocortical activity (basal, diurnal variation, and
responses to social stressors) in adolescents at risk for psychopathology. Salivary cortisol levels
were examined in normally developing and at-risk youth with internalizing and externalizing
symptoms ranging from subclinical to clinical levels. Adolescents showed expected patterns of
diurnal variation, with high early morning cortisol levels and a pattern of decline throughout the
day. Females showed higher midday and late afternoon levels than males, and these patterns
interacted with risk status. Internalizing problems sometimes were associated with gradual rather
than steep declines in basal cortisol production. Both immediate and delayed cortisol reactivity to
a social performance stressor were associated with internalizing symptoms. There was no
evidence of relations between externalizing problems and underarousal of the
hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) system. These and other results suggest that
gender is an important moderating factor linking psychopathology, development, and context with
HPA axis functioning in adolescence.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
311 articles.
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