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Role of cortisol in mood and memory in patients with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy.


ABSTRACT:

Objective

This study prospectively examined the relationships among late night salivary cortisol (NSC) levels and depressive symptoms, memory performance, and hippocampal volumes in patients with medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and the potential mediating effects of cortisol in the relationships between these variables.

Methods

Participants included 24 adults with well-characterized medically refractory TLE (right = 11; left = 12; bitemporal = 1). All patients provided saliva samples and completed measures of mood, anxiety, and memory (objective and subjective). MRI-based volumetric analyses of the hippocampi were also conducted.

Results

As hypothesized, cortisol was found to be negatively related to several memory measures such that patients with higher cortisol levels demonstrated lower memory performance. However, unexpectedly, cortisol was not related to current symptoms of depression or anxiety, subjective memory ratings, or hippocampal volumes. Consistent with previous findings in the literature, a number of other relationships among the study variables were observed (objective memory and hippocampal volume; subjective memory and mood/anxiety). Results of mediator analyses suggested that cortisol does not mediate the relationship between depression and memory dysfunction or the relationship between depression and hippocampal atrophy.

Conclusions

While cortisol may play a role in memory performance in patients with TLE, it does not fully explain the relationship between depression and mesial temporal dysfunction, likely reflecting the complex and multifactorial relationships among these variables. Results confirm the relationship between memory performance and structural brain integrity and provide further support for a role of depression in subjective memory complaints.

SUBMITTER: Busch RM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3466605 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Role of cortisol in mood and memory in patients with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy.

Busch R M RM   Frazier T T   Chapin J S JS   Hamrahian A H AH   Diehl B B   Alexopoulos A A   Unnwongse K K   Naugle R I RI   Kubu C S CS   Tesar G E GE   Najm I M IM  

Neurology 20120321 14


<h4>Objective</h4>This study prospectively examined the relationships among late night salivary cortisol (NSC) levels and depressive symptoms, memory performance, and hippocampal volumes in patients with medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and the potential mediating effects of cortisol in the relationships between these variables.<h4>Methods</h4>Participants included 24 adults with well-characterized medically refractory TLE (right = 11; left = 12; bitemporal = 1). All patients p  ...[more]

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