Back to Search Start Over

COMPARISON OF PEROXIDASE RESPONSE TO MENTAL ARITHMETIC STRESS IN SALIVA OF SMOKERS AND NON-SMOKERS

Authors :
Naohide Kinae
Hitoshi Harada
Yuuko Hirai
Takahiko Ono
Mitsuo Hiramatsu
Nobuhiro Goi
Akira Ikari
Kimitsugu Nakamura
Kuniaki Takagi
Source :
The Journal of Toxicological Sciences. 32:121-127
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Japanese Society of Toxicology, 2007.

Abstract

Saliva is the first body fluid to encounter exogenous materials or gases such as cigarette smoke (CS). The aim of this study was to examine whether smoking affects oral peroxidase (OPO) reactivity to mental stress. The subjects were 39 non-smokers and 10 smokers. In the experiment, the Kraepelin psychodiagnostic test as a psychological stressor and saliva was sampled 30 min before, just before, immediately after, and 30 min after the beginning of the test. OPO reactivity to the test between smokers and non-smokers was measured in addition to uric acid concentration, flow rate, IgA, thiocyanate (SCN-) concentration, amylase activity as a salivary stress marker, and ultra-weak chemiluminescence (UCL) level, which is indicative of salivary antioxidative and antibacterial abilities. Moreover, we studied the effect of smoking on the response of salivary peroxidase (SPO) and myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity to mental stress, respectively. The results showed that the IgA concentration, amylase activity, SCN(- concentration, and UCL level are higher in the non-smoking group than smoking group and the IgA concentration and UCL level increased in the non-smokers significantly just after the Kraepelin test. The levels of SCN-) were higher in smokers than in non-smokers and OPO activity was greater in the non-smoking group in all sessions. Furthermore, only the non-smokers had significantly increased MPO activity just after the test. MPO may play a crucial role in the response to acute psychological stress besides inflammation, and CS suppresses this response significantly.

Details

ISSN :
18803989 and 03881350
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Toxicological Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b8a25f7202ee3fe202f8db0156f79443
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2131/jts.32.121