학술논문

Anticipatory stress associated with functional magnetic resonance imaging: Implications for psychosocial stress research.
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Anticipatory stress
Cortisol
Psychosocial stress
Skin conductance
fMRI
Adolescent
Anticipation
Psychological
Female
Galvanic Skin Response
Heart Rate
Humans
Hydrocortisone
Image Processing
Computer-Assisted
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Oxygen
Saliva
Stress
Psychological
Young Adult
Language
Abstract
Stress tasks performed during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) elicit a relatively small cortisol response compared to stress tasks completed in a traditional behavioral laboratory, which may be due to apprehension of fMRI that elicits an anticipatory stress response. The present study investigated whether anticipatory stress is greater prior to research completed in an MRI environment than in a traditional behavioral laboratory. Anticipatory stress (indexed by cortisol) was greater prior to testing in the MRI environment than traditional behavioral laboratory. Furthermore, anticipation of fMRI elicited a cortisol response commensurate with the response to the stress task in the behavioral laboratory. However, in the MRI environment, post-stress cortisol was significantly lower than baseline cortisol. Taken together, these findings suggest the stress elicited by anticipation of fMRI may lead to acute elevations in cortisol prior to scanning, which may in turn disrupt the cortisol response to stress tasks performed during scanning.