2013
DOI: 10.5664/jcsm.3280
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Salivary Biomarkers of Physical Fatigue as Markers of Sleep Deprivation

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Cited by 16 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
(52 reference statements)
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“…In addition, salivary and serum cortisol levels are influenced by various stressors including insomnia, depression, and fatigue. The fatigue led by insomnia or other factors may be influenced by circadian rhythms 46 . Salivary amylase has also been identified as a biomarker for sleep deprivation in Drosophila and humans.…”
Section: Does Psychological Stress Make a Change In Salivary Protein mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, salivary and serum cortisol levels are influenced by various stressors including insomnia, depression, and fatigue. The fatigue led by insomnia or other factors may be influenced by circadian rhythms 46 . Salivary amylase has also been identified as a biomarker for sleep deprivation in Drosophila and humans.…”
Section: Does Psychological Stress Make a Change In Salivary Protein mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mathematical model analysis was performed in several studies to screen the different indexes from the healthy control group from dozens of metabolites, such as cis-aconitate, socitrate, citrate and malate ( 43 ). Michael et al ( 44 ) found through metabolomics analysis that there were metabolites used as the fatigue markers in the saliva of athletes after three-day soccer game, namely 3-methylhistidine (short form: 3M-His), glucose-1-phosphate (short form: G-1-P), glucose 6-phosphate (short form: G-6-P) and some amino acid compound. However, the diagnostic efficacy of these markers was not further analyzed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is possible, however, that younger mothers may be unable to adjust to the required lifestyle changes for their infants solely based on their physical strength prior to infant care. Infant care includes frequent feeds at night, which often results in substantial sleep loss, increasing risk of somatic symptoms, physical fatigue, depressive symptoms, and eating disorders (Broman, Lundh, & Hetta, ; Michael, Valle, Cox, Kalns, & Fogt, ; Tsuchiya et al ., ; Ulman et al ., ). Mothers who perceive such a lifestyle change as difficult may feel helpless to manage their new life with their infants after discharge; anxieties may increase while self‐confidence may decrease (Pond & Kemp, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%