Abstract

Abstract Introduction Stress is a known contributor to immune system suppression associated with higher illness susceptibility, including acute infectious respiratory illness, or the common cold. Sleep quality, shown to impact immunity, is an additional mechanism that may underlie the association between stress and cold symptomatology. Although the associations between stress and sleep and cold symptomatology have been examined separately, little is known about the mechanistic role of sleep in these associations. The present study examined sleep quality as a potential pathway between stress and cold symptomatology difference scores. Methods Archival data from the Common Cold Project (Pittsburgh Cold Study 3) were utilized for the present study. Participants were 213 adults (Mean Age=30.1 yrs., SD=10.9 yrs., 42.3% female) who completed a 5-day viral challenge and self-report measures of cold severity (Jackson Symptom Score; measured from beginning to end of viral challenge), baseline sleep quality (PSQI), and perceived stress as part of study participation. SPSS v 27 and Hayes’ PROCESS mediation macro were used to assess study aims. Age and sex were included as covariates. Results Greater perceived stress was significantly associated with worse sleep quality [B=.15, 95% CI .10, .21]. Sleep quality fully mediated the association between stress and changes in symptomatology; better sleep was associated with larger changes in cold severity [B=-.23, 95% CI -.43, -.04], defined as differences in symptomatology from beginning to end of the viral challenge, beyond stress alone. Zero-order correlation analyses revealed a trend level (r=.04, p=.06) association between sleep quality and aggregate cold severity, suggesting that as sleep improves, symptoms decrease. Conclusion Within the present sample, sleep quality surfaced as an indirect pathway linking stress to changes in cold severity. Better sleep was associated with greater changes in cold severity above perceived stress. These findings, together with the trend level, positive association between sleep quality and cold symptomatology, suggest that better sleep may be associated with less severe symptomatology. Future research should attend to mechanisms underlying the associations between stress, sleep, and cold symptomatology. Support (if any):

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