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OBJECTIVE: Comparison of low back pain (LBP) patients with and without fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) with regard to affective distress. METHODS: Patients with LBP who had been admitted to various clinics in Germany were examined upon admission. Comparisons were done by dividing the patients into groups with and without signs of FMS. Additionally, both groups were compared after being matched according to sex, age, and pain severity. RESULTS: 15 out of 135 LBP patients met the American College of Rheumatology criteria for fibromyalgia. Patients with FMS showed remarkably higher levels of pain severity and affective distress. After controlling for different levels of pain severity, these pronounced differences disappeared. CONCLUSION: Affective distress is not a unique feature of FMS, but seem to be caused entirely by higher levels of pain severity.
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The present study investigated psychophysiological responses to paced respiration of different frequencies. Twenty men and 20 women (mean age: 24.3 years) underwent five breathing conditions (paced with 0.15 Hz, 0.20 Hz, 0.25 Hz, 0.30 Hz, and unpaced), each lasting 5 min. As dependent physiological measures heart period, and different heart period variability (HPV) parameters were assessed. Psychological variables consisted of mood estimates as well as rated accuracy and effort to follow the pacing rhythm. HPV decreased with higher breathing frequencies, under paced and unpaced conditions, whereas mood ratings did not change. Subjects indicated more effort and less accuracy in following the pacing signal, the more its frequency differed from their spontaneous breathing frequency. The comparison of a spontaneous breathing condition with a frequency-matched paced condition revealed that pacing per se provoked a reduction in heart period. Because this decrease was not accompanied by changes in any of the HPV frequency components, their validity as measures of autonomic control needs to be questioned.
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A previously recorded electromagnetic impulse of natural origin, a 10 kHz-sferic, was simulated and presented to 20 subjects. The magnetic component of the signal with a maximum field amplitude of 50 nT and a duration of 500 microseconds was applied over a duration of 10 minutes with a pulse repetition rate that varied statistically between 7 and 20 Hz. After sferics exposure, an additional 20 minutes without treatment were recorded in order to examine possible prolonged effects of sferics stimulation. The control group (n = 20) received no treatment. As a dependent measure, electrocortical changes throughout the course of the experiment were determined by means of EEG spectral analysis and compared between the two groups. Sferics exposure provoked increases in alpha and beta power. The effect was present during stimulation and continued for 10 minutes after the end of treatment. A longer lasting influence of sferics exposure was displayed by subjects with a high degree in weather sensitivity, somatic complaints, and neuroticism, who continued to stay on an enhanced alpha power level until the end of registration (20 minutes after the end of exposure). With these results a general electrocortical sensitivity towards sferics as well as individual differences in sferics reactivity could be demonstrated.
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Many patients with migraine believe weather is a trigger for their headaches. The objective of this study was to determine if very low frequency sferics, pulse-shaped electromagnetic fields originating from atmospheric discharges (lightning), are precipitating factors. The occurrence of sferics impulses is characterized by a daily, as well as an annual, periodicity and is thought to be associated with various pathological processes. The diaries of 37 women suffering from migraine and tension-type headaches were analyzed over a period of 6 months and correlated with daily sferics activity and other weather phenomena in the area of Giessen, Germany. From October through December (autumn), sferics activity was correlated with the occurrence of migraine (r = 0.33, P<.01); however, there was no correlation in July and August (summer), when the thunderstorm activity had been very intense. In summer, tension-type headaches were associated with other weather parameters such as temperature (r = 0.36, P<.01) and vapor pressure (r = 0.27, P<.05).
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Audio-visual binding – as subset of crossmodal integration – describes the combination of information across both these senses to the subjective unified perception of a bound object. We investigated audio-visual binding by using the ventriloquism-effect (localization of a sound is biased towards and by a simultaneous visual stimulus) to act as an indicator for perceived binding. Simple visual and auditory stimuli were presented synchronously or asynchronously. fMRI was recorded during task performance (n=19 subjects) in order to reveal activation in areas discussed to be involved in multisensory processing in the literature. Contrasting trials with reported ventriloquism-effect versus the no-binding condition revealed activation in the insula, superior temporal sulcus and parieto-occipital sulcus. Implementing the ventriloquism-effect allows us to relate these activations to consciousness-related processes, which probably are different from stimulus-driven multisensory integration in subcortical areas.
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Although it is known that there are fundamental personality differences in the behavioral responses to emotional stimuli, traits have scarcely been investigated in this context by means of functional imaging studies. To maximize the variance with respect to personality, the authors tested 12 control subjects and 12 subjects who had sadomasochistic experiences with respect to the relationship between J. A. Gray's (1970) personality dimensions, the behavioral approach system (BAS) and the behavioral inhibition system (BIS), and brain activity in regions of interest. The BIS was associated with activity in numerous brain areas in response to fear, disgust, and erotic visual stimuli, whereas few associations could he detected between the BAS and brain activity in response to disgust and erotic stimuli.
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fMRI studies have shown that the perception of facial disgust expressions specifically activates the insula. The present fMRI study investigated whether this structure is also involved in the processing of visual stimuli depicting non-mimic disgust elicitors compared to fear-inducing and neutral scenes. Twelve female subjects were scanned while viewing alternating blocks of 40 disgust-inducing, 40 fear-inducing and 40 affectively neutral pictures, shown for 1.5 s each. Afterwards, affective ratings were assessed. The disgust pictures, rated as highly repulsive, induced activation in the insula, the amygdala, the orbitofrontal and occipito-temporal cortex. Since during the fear condition the insula was also involved, our findings do not fit the idea of the insula as a specific disgust processor.
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fMRI studies have shown that the perception of facial disgust expressions specifically activates the insula. The present fMRI study investigated whether this structure is also involved in the processing of visual stimuli depicting non-mimic disgust elicitors compared to fear-inducing and neutral scenes. Twelve female subjects were scanned while viewing alternating blocks of 40 disgust-inducing, 40 fear-inducing and 40 affectively neutral pictures, shown for 1.5 s each. Afterwards, affective ratings were assessed. The disgust pictures, rated as highly repulsive, induced activation in the insula, the amygdala, the orbitofrontal and occipito-temporal cortex. Since during the fear condition the insula was also involved, our findings do not fit the idea of the insula as a specific disgust processor.
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Many neurophysiological studies give evidence for a matching system between action observation and imitation. We used functional MRI to investigate the effects of different instructions for observing identical stimuli of whole-body gymnastics movements. The imitative-like observation mode asked normal human participants to observe the sequence containing repetitive parts and to subsequently imagine the observed movements in the first-person perspective. The evaluative observation mode asked the participants to carefully observe and judge movement accuracy and consistency in the repetitive sequence. We hypothesized that the supplementary motor area would be specifically involved in performing the observational tasks. Results indicate that the SMA proper is generally activated during observation of whole-body gymnastic movements and shows pronounced activation in imitative-like observation mode. Pre-SMA activity can be differentially modulated by instructions related to the observation task.
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The understanding of individual differences in responses to disgusting stimuli is important to gain more insight into the development of certain psychiatric disorders. The aim of this study was to investigate conditioned disgust responses, its potential overlap with conditioned fear responses (CRs) and the influence of disgust sensitivity on blood oxygen level-dependent responses. Yet even though current studies report evidence that disgust sensitivity is a vulnerability factor, the knowledge about the underlying neural mechanisms remains very limited. Two groups were exposed either to a disgust- or a fear-conditioning paradigm. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we identified a conjoint activated network including the cingulate cortex, the nucleus accumbens, the orbitofrontal cortex, and the occipital cortex within the disgust- and the fear-conditioning group. Moreover, we report evidence of increased insula activation in the disgust-conditioning group. In addition, functional connectivity analysis revealed increased interconnections, most pronounced within the insula in the high disgust sensitivity group compared with the low disgust sensitivity group. The conjunction results suggest that the conditioned responses in disgust and fear conditioning recruit the same neural network, implicating that different conditioned responses of aversive learning depend on a common neural network. Increased insula activation within the disgust-conditioning group might be attributable to heightened interoceptive processes, which might be more pronounced in disgust. Finally, the findings regarding disgust sensitivity are discussed with respect to vulnerability factors for certain psychiatric disorders.
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Eintragsart
- Buchteil (1)
- Zeitschriftenartikel (11)
Thema
- Action observation (1)
- Adult (8)
- Affective Symptoms (1)
- Alpha Rhythm (1)
- Amygdala (2)
- Beta Rhythm (1)
- Binding (1)
- Brain (2)
- Brain Mapping (2)
- Cerebral Cortex (2)
- Cerebrovascular Circulation (1)
- Computer Simulation (1)
- Conditioning, Psychological (1)
- Consciousness-related (1)
- Crossmodal (1)
- Differential activation (1)
- Electroencephalography (1)
- Electromagnetic Fields (2)
- Emotions (3)
- Expressed Emotion (1)
- Facial Expression (2)
- Fear (3)
- Female (8)
- Fibromyalgia (1)
- fMRI (1)
- Frontal Lobe (2)
- Galvanic Skin Response (1)
- Heart (1)
- Heart Rate (1)
- Hemodynamics (1)
- Humans (8)
- Image Processing, Computer-Assisted (1)
- Inhibition, Psychological (1)
- Instructions (1)
- Lightning (1)
- Low Back Pain (1)
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (4)
- Male (5)
- Middle Aged (2)
- Migraine Disorders (1)
- Multisensory (1)
- Neurotic Disorders (1)
- Occipital Lobe (2)
- Oxygen (1)
- Pain Measurement (1)
- Pattern Recognition, Visual (2)
- Personality (1)
- Personality Assessment (1)
- Photic Stimulation (2)
- Prognosis (1)
- Psychological Theory (1)
- Regression Analysis (1)
- Respiratory Mechanics (1)
- Seasons (1)
- Sex Characteristics (1)
- Sick Role (1)
- Simulation hypothesis (1)
- Supplementary motor area (1)
- Temporal Lobe (2)
- Tension-Type Headache (1)
- Visual Perception (2)
- Weather (2)
- Young Adult (1)