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Differences in saliva collection location and disparities in baseline and diurnal rhythms of alpha-amylase: a preliminary note of caution
Authors:Harmon Amanda G  Towe-Goodman Nissa R  Fortunato Christine K  Granger Douglas A
Affiliation:aDepartment of Biobehavioral Health, Penn State University, USA;bDepartment of Human Development and Family Studies, Penn State University, USA
Abstract:Identified in the early 1980s as a surrogate marker of the sympathetic nervous system component of the stress response, there has been renewed interest in measuring salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) to test biosocial models of stress vulnerability. This brief report presents studies that document that oral fluids from the parotid and submandibular gland areas had higher sAA values than did whole saliva specimens, and sAA values in whole saliva were higher than levels measured in oral fluids from the sublingual gland area. sAA in oral fluids from the parotid and submandibular gland areas showed the highest and more pronounced diurnal variation than levels in whole saliva, and sAA in sublingual saliva showed the lowest and shallowest diurnal variation. When this source of inherent variability in sAA activity levels is not controlled for by collecting oral fluids consistently from specific gland areas, the detection of individual differences, associations between sAA and “behavioral” variables, and intra-individual change in sAA levels may be compromised. Awareness, and management, of this ubiquitous source of measurement error in sAA are essential to ensure the success of future research on the correlates and concomitants of sAA levels, stress-related reactivity and recovery, and diurnal variation.
Keywords:Salivary alpha-amylase   Saliva collection   Whole saliva   Parotid saliva   Sublingual saliva   Submandibular saliva   Oral fluid   Surrogate marker
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