To conduct the research, Parker??s team sought volunteers from among a group of people who needed lumbar punctures for medical reasons. The study included 27 subjects ages 4-64. With the volunteers?? consent, the researchers tested oxytocin levels in CSF obtained during the lumbar puncture. They collected blood samples at the same time that the CSF was obtained. In addition, the parents of 10 children enrolled in the study answered a questionnaire about the children??s anxiety levels.
??The fact that we measured blood and CSF at the same time shows for the first time that there??s a tight relationship between oxytocin levels in those two compartments [blood and CSF] and anxiety,?? said the study??s lead author, Dean Carson, PhD, postdoctoral scholar in psychiatry and behavioral sciences.
Oxytocin levels were lower in the blood than in the CSF in all subjects, but the concentrations in the two compartments followed similar patterns: People with relatively low blood oxytocin also had low CSF oxytocin, while those with high levels of the hormone in one compartment also had high levels in the other. Low oxytocin levels were linked to higher anxiety scores.
In autistic children, varying oxytocin levels
??I was amazed by how beautiful the data looked,?? Parker said, noting that the correlations between oxytocin and anxiety were surprisingly strong for a small study, and provide interesting fodder for future research. ??I think it opened up a lot more doors.??
''For instance, Carson and Parker want to know whether oxytocin could treat anxiety in some kids with autism. Social anxiety affects 80-90 percent of children with autism, Parker noted. Recently published research by her team showed that oxytocin levels vary in children with autism, which hints that different children may derive different levels of benefit from oxytocin therapy.






