Ultrasound Measures of Bone and the Diurnal Free Cortisol Cycle: A Positive Association with the Awakening Cortisol Response in Healthy Premenopausal Women

Abstract
In this study we examined the relationship between characteristics of the diurnal pattern of salivary free cortisol concentration and ultrasound (US) measures of bone in premenopausal women. Subjects were 36 healthy, eumenorrhoeic, nonsmoking women mean age (SE) 30.9 (1.3) years. Saliva samples were collected on awakening and 10, 20, 30, 120, 240, and 600 minutes thereafter. Calcaneal broadband ultrasonic attenuation (BUA) and speed of sound (SOS) were determined. Mean (SE) salivary cortisol concentration was 4.7 (0.5) nmol/l on awakening, peaked at 8.6 (0.9) nmol/l 30 min later, and declined to a trough of 2.3 (0.2) nmol/l 600 min after awakening. BUA and SOS were significantly associated with cortisol 0 and 30 min after awakening (r = 0.40 and 0.40 for BUA and 0.33 and 0.37 for SOS, respectively, with body mass included as covariate). Cortisol levels 240 and 600 min after awakening were not significantly associated with bone variables. Women above the median for peak (30 min after awakening) cortisol had significantly higher BUA and SOS than those below the median [BUA 51.8 (1.0) vs 47.4 (1.5) dB/MHz, P = 0.017; SOS 1554.0 (2.5) vs 1546.4 (1.5) m/sec, P = 0.008]. A high peak in cortisol following awakening was associated with higher US measures of bone in healthy premenopausal women. This finding suggests the possibility that diurnal variation in cortisol may have a role in bone metabolism.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: