The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol

Abstract Background There is an increasing interest in the ability to non-invasively assess biological markers of stress. Measures of inflammation following exposure to acute stress have been assessed in saliva, but a systematic review and meta-analysis of the reliability of changes in response to s...

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Main Authors: Danica C. Slavish, Yvette Z. Szabo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:Systematic Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-019-1026-4
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spelling doaj-c1110d7702e749438a9207609141f8352020-11-25T02:12:52ZengBMCSystematic Reviews2046-40532019-05-01811810.1186/s13643-019-1026-4The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocolDanica C. Slavish0Yvette Z. Szabo1Department of Psychology, University of North TexasDepartment of Veterans Affairs VISN 17 Center of Excellence for Research on Returning War VeteransAbstract Background There is an increasing interest in the ability to non-invasively assess biological markers of stress. Measures of inflammation following exposure to acute stress have been assessed in saliva, but a systematic review and meta-analysis of the reliability of changes in response to stress has not been conducted. The proposed review aims to update and extend a prior review of this literature by performing a systematic review and meta-analysis, conducting moderator analyses, summarizing and reviewing best practices, and providing recommendations for future research. Methods and analysis The adopted search strategy will involve the electronic databases PubMed, PsycINFO, and Embase. We will include the articles identified by a 2015 narrative review on a similar topic, as well as use reference treeing to identify additional potentially relevant articles. Identified articles will be independently screened by title and abstract. The full text of potentially relevant articles will then be retrieved and read for full inclusion criteria. Data will be extracted, and random-effects meta-analyses will be conducted in R for articles determined to meet all inclusion criteria. The primary outcome will be the magnitude of changes in inflammatory biomarkers following acute stress exposure, as indicated by Cohen’s d. Participant psychosocial or demographic (e.g., age, gender/sex, race/ethnicity, salivary flow rate, oral health status, health status) and methodological (e.g., stressor type, sample timing, assay technique, sample collection method, study quality) moderators of this response also will be examined using meta-regression. Discussion This systematic review will synthesize the evidence regarding salivary markers of inflammation in response to acute stress. We anticipate variation across studies but hypothesize that salivary markers of inflammation will increase in response to acute stress. The evidence obtained for this study will help guide future research by providing guidelines for the design and measurement of studies assessing salivary inflammation in response to acute stress. Findings will be disseminated with a peer-reviewed manuscript and an international conference presentation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-019-1026-4SalivaOral fluidStressorStressTSSTCytokines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Danica C. Slavish
Yvette Z. Szabo
spellingShingle Danica C. Slavish
Yvette Z. Szabo
The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol
Systematic Reviews
Saliva
Oral fluid
Stressor
Stress
TSST
Cytokines
author_facet Danica C. Slavish
Yvette Z. Szabo
author_sort Danica C. Slavish
title The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol
title_short The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol
title_full The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol
title_fullStr The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol
title_full_unstemmed The effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol
title_sort effect of acute stress on salivary markers of inflammation: a systematic review protocol
publisher BMC
series Systematic Reviews
issn 2046-4053
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background There is an increasing interest in the ability to non-invasively assess biological markers of stress. Measures of inflammation following exposure to acute stress have been assessed in saliva, but a systematic review and meta-analysis of the reliability of changes in response to stress has not been conducted. The proposed review aims to update and extend a prior review of this literature by performing a systematic review and meta-analysis, conducting moderator analyses, summarizing and reviewing best practices, and providing recommendations for future research. Methods and analysis The adopted search strategy will involve the electronic databases PubMed, PsycINFO, and Embase. We will include the articles identified by a 2015 narrative review on a similar topic, as well as use reference treeing to identify additional potentially relevant articles. Identified articles will be independently screened by title and abstract. The full text of potentially relevant articles will then be retrieved and read for full inclusion criteria. Data will be extracted, and random-effects meta-analyses will be conducted in R for articles determined to meet all inclusion criteria. The primary outcome will be the magnitude of changes in inflammatory biomarkers following acute stress exposure, as indicated by Cohen’s d. Participant psychosocial or demographic (e.g., age, gender/sex, race/ethnicity, salivary flow rate, oral health status, health status) and methodological (e.g., stressor type, sample timing, assay technique, sample collection method, study quality) moderators of this response also will be examined using meta-regression. Discussion This systematic review will synthesize the evidence regarding salivary markers of inflammation in response to acute stress. We anticipate variation across studies but hypothesize that salivary markers of inflammation will increase in response to acute stress. The evidence obtained for this study will help guide future research by providing guidelines for the design and measurement of studies assessing salivary inflammation in response to acute stress. Findings will be disseminated with a peer-reviewed manuscript and an international conference presentation.
topic Saliva
Oral fluid
Stressor
Stress
TSST
Cytokines
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-019-1026-4
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