Title of article
Irritable bowel syndrome and symptom severity: Evidence of negative attention bias, diminished vigour, and autonomic dysregulation
Author/Authors
Phillips، نويسنده , , Kristy and Wright، نويسنده , , Bradley J. and Kent، نويسنده , , Stephen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
7
From page
13
To page
19
Abstract
AbstractObjective
ermine if cognitive processing, and subjective and physiological responses to stress and relaxation differed between an irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) group and control group. How these variables relate to the severity of IBS symptoms was also determined.
s
-one IBS participants and 20 controls provided cognitive (attention and processing), subjective (perceived stress and vigour), and physiological (heart rate, blood pressure, and skin conductance) data during a relaxation and stress phase. Logistic regression analyses determined which variables are related to the IBS group and hierarchical linear regression assessed how the variables are related to the severity of IBS symptoms.
s
tive and cognitive factors (drowsiness at baseline, total vigour, and reduced Stroop colour-naming accuracy for negative words) are significantly related to IBS, χ2 (3, N = 41) = 23.67, p < .001, accurately categorising 85% of participants. IBS symptom severity was associated with both subjective (drowsiness at baseline and a smaller reduction in tiredness from relaxation to stress) and physiological (smaller increase in systolic blood pressure from baseline to stress phase and lower skin conductance at baseline) variables. This model predicted IBS severity, F (4, 16) = 11.20, p < .001, and accounted for 74% of the variability in scores.
sions
tive attention bias, which may be related to a negative self-schema, as well as perceived low vigour were important in categorising IBS. Low subjective vigour and reduced physiological reactivity to both relaxation and stress conditions were associated with IBS severity, suggestive of illness-related allostatic load.
Keywords
Allostatic load , Progressive Muscle Relaxation , Blood pressure , skin conductance , STRESS , Stroop-test
Journal title
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Record number
1745138
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