4.4 Article

Emotional overactivity in patients with irritable bowel syndrome

Journal

NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY AND MOTILITY
Volume 30, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nmo.13387

Keywords

emotion; expression; irritable bowel syndrome; reactivity; stress

Funding

  1. Association Francois Aupetit (AFA)
  2. French society of Gastroenterology (SNFGE)
  3. Direction de la Recherche Clinique (DRC 2008 - BONAZ B.) of the Grenoble University Hospital

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BackgroundNegativity is often observed in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). No study has examined their emotional expressiveness as a marker of emotional reactivity. We investigated IBS patients' vulnerability to an emotional load by associating their expressiveness with psychological and neurophysiological assessments. We hypothesized that IBS would be characterized by a lack of expressiveness coupled with high scores in psychological and neurophysiological parameters. MethodsWe assessed the emotional facial expressions (EMFACS), psychological (anxiety, depression, alexithymia), and neurophysiological (cortisol, heart rate variability (HRV)) parameters of 25 IBS patients and 26 healthy controls (HC) while they watched fear-eliciting movie extracts. Key ResultsOverall, the task elicited an increase in state anxiety and consistent HRV responses. However, IBS patients differed from HC as they displayed more sadness and tended to display more rage. Contrary to HC, IBS patients showed an increase in heart rate and a decrease in parasympathetic regulation, reflecting an enhanced responsiveness corroborated by higher scores in depression and state anxiety. Consistent with their higher difficulty in identifying feelings, a component of alexithymia positively correlated with their expressions of rage, they were not aware of their increase in anxiety during the task, whereas HC were. No linear relationship between patients' expressions and their neurophysiological responses was found. Conclusions & InferencesIrritable bowel syndrome patients displayed greater emotional expressiveness with negative prevalence. This reflects an emotional vulnerability potentially related to low regulation skills and underscores the importance of considering the central dysregulation hypothesis in IBS as a promising avenue of research.

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