Abstract
AbstractPurposePlasma copeptin (a surrogate marker of arginine vasopressin) is increasingly being used as a marker of stress in several research and clinical contexts. However, the response to an acute physical stressor in healthy adults has not yet been tested meaning it is unclear whether copeptin reflects dynamic changes in stress or whether this is moderated by different basal copeptin concentrations and how this relates to other stress hormones.MethodsSecondary data analysis in a subsample of participants (n = 7; n = 1 woman) who opted-in for muscle biopsies in a randomised crossover study investigating the effects of acute hypohydration (HYPO) versus rehydration (RE) on metabolism.ResultsPlasma copeptin responded to the muscle biopsy stress stimulus, with a similar magnitude of difference according to basal concentrations during HYPO and RE; however, the peak was higher and concentrations typically took longer to return to baseline during HYPO. Despite large differences in copeptin concentrations, adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) and cortisol showed a similar trends in response to the biopsies, regardless of hydration status.ConclusionCopeptin responded dynamically to an acute physical stressor (muscle biopsy). HYPO induced higher basal copeptin concentrations compared to RE, and resulted in a higher and prolonged copeptin response. Further research should investigate the mechanisms underlying the lack of differences in ACTH and cortisol according to hydration status.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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