Abstract

Urinary catecholamine and cortisol excretion was studied in a group of three-year-olds, their mothers and fathers during night rest, one day at home and one day at hospital. The stay in the hospital, which was part of a longitudinal study of the families, induced a pronounced rise in adrenaline excretion and a moderate increase in noradrenaline excretion in relation to the at-home level. Although the catecholamine excretion in relation to body weight was much higher in the children, the magnitude of the increase at the hospital was about the same in all the family members. The adrenaline excretion was also affected by the diverse conditions at the hospital and showed, for example, a marked decrease during lunch hour. The cortisol excretion at the hospital tended to be elevated only in fathers. On the average, mothers excreted about the same amount of adrenaline as the fathers at the hospital, but significantly more noradrenaline. In earlier studies males have shown a greater adrenaline output than females during achievement-demanding situations. The findings of this study were interpreted within the context of the specific challenge that the situation represented to the mothers. The mothers also excreted more noradrenaline in the at-home condition. Catecholamine and cortisol excretion levels within family members tended to be positively correlated, but the correlations were generally low.

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