Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Department of Psychology, Claremont McKenna College, Claremont, CA.
Dev Psychobiol. 2019 Apr;61(3):465-476. doi: 10.1002/dev.21830. Epub 2019 Feb 10.
Much of the existing research on biological mechanisms underlying the stress experience has focused largely on moment-to-moment stress, rather than on chronic stress, an arguably more powerful predictor of long-term outcomes. Recent methodological innovations have paved the way for new lines of research on chronic stress, with promising implications for developmental researchers and for those who study health and adversity. In particular, there are increasing studies that have focused on chronic stress assessments by relying on cortisol derived from hair and nails as a biomarker for chronic stress. In this paper, we provide an overview of their use, describe how hair and nail cortisol ought to be conceptualized differently across the lifespan, how developmental factors may impact its interpretation, and the circumstances under which its use may be more methodologically sensible. The purpose of this review is to provoke further discussion and encourage careful research designs that utilize hair and nail cortisol for understanding the effects of chronic stress exposure from the early developmental period, across adverse contexts, and in association with psychological and physical health outcomes.
现有的关于压力体验的生物学机制的研究主要集中在即时压力上,而不是慢性压力上,后者是更有力的长期结果预测因子。最近的方法学创新为慢性压力的新研究开辟了道路,这对发展研究人员和研究健康与逆境的人员都有希望。特别是,越来越多的研究侧重于通过依赖头发和指甲中的皮质醇作为慢性压力的生物标志物来评估慢性压力。在本文中,我们概述了它们的使用情况,描述了在整个生命周期中应如何以不同的方式概念化头发和指甲中的皮质醇,发育因素如何影响其解释,以及在什么情况下使用它可能更符合方法论。本综述的目的是引发进一步的讨论,并鼓励使用头发和指甲皮质醇来理解从早期发育阶段、在不利环境中以及与心理和身体健康结果相关的慢性压力暴露的影响的精心研究设计。