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2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2019.03.015
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Habitual and acute exercise effects on salivary biomarkers in response to psychosocial stress

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Cited by 28 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…The results of our study did not support the hypothesis that practicing regular physical activity buffers and reduces the time course of the autonomic response to acute stressors in physical and cognitive domains (cross-stressor adaptation hypothesis) [26]. This generalizes the notion that sAA stress responses are not influenced by habitual physical activity from younger adulthood [29] to late-middle-aged and older adulthood. In fact, the number of daily steps habitually performed did not explain inter-individual differences in autonomic response to either of the locomotor, cognitive or locomotor-cognitive tasks.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 99%
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“…The results of our study did not support the hypothesis that practicing regular physical activity buffers and reduces the time course of the autonomic response to acute stressors in physical and cognitive domains (cross-stressor adaptation hypothesis) [26]. This generalizes the notion that sAA stress responses are not influenced by habitual physical activity from younger adulthood [29] to late-middle-aged and older adulthood. In fact, the number of daily steps habitually performed did not explain inter-individual differences in autonomic response to either of the locomotor, cognitive or locomotor-cognitive tasks.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 99%
“…The evidence on sAA is inconsistent and limited to young and middle-aged individuals’ responses to social-evaluative stressors [27,28]. A recent study failed to find moderation of the acute sAA response to stressors by habitual physical activity levels [29].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The inconsistency of this reaction with HR reactivity may be explained by the flexibility of the cardiovascular system, manifesting in an easy return to initial HR values after a physically and/or psychologically stressful event [35]. Indeed, in their recent study, Wunsch et al proved that the effects of stress on salivary ANS and HPA markers do not seem to be related [36]. Both the ANS and the HPA axis are distinct physiological systems that are involved in the human response to stress, although there are some interrelations between these systems.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While this has often been demonstrated for regular exercise (Mücke et al, 2018), only few studies investigated such effects after a single exercise bout. Three relatively recent studies investigated the effects of acute exercise on physiological stress reactivity in young adults (Zschucke et al, 2015;Wood et al, 2018;Wunsch et al, 2019). Interestingly, although these studies differed largely with regard to exercise type (walking vs. bicycle ergometer vs. treadmill), exercise intensity (moderate walking vs. 70% of their individual maximum load vs. 60-70% of maximum oxygen uptake), time delay from exercise to stressor (30 min vs. 10 min vs. 90 min delay), stress task (TSST-G vs. Montreal Imaging Stress Task), and control task (passive control vs. light stretching), they consistently reported attenuated cortisol and/or alpha-amylase reactivity in the exercise group, compared to the control group.…”
Section: Exercise Effects On Stress Reactivitymentioning
confidence: 99%