Bulzacka E, Lavault S, Pelissolo A, Bagnis Isnard C
Pôle de psychiatrie et d'addictologie, groupe hospitalier Henri-Mondor-Albert-Chenevier, AP-HP, 40, rue Mesly, 94000 Créteil, France; Fondation fondamental, RTRS santé mentale, 40, rue Mesly, 94000 Créteil, France.
Inserm, UMRS1158 neurophysiologie respiratoire expérimentale et clinique, Sorbonne universités, UPMC université Paris 06, 47-83, boulevard de l'Hôpital, 75651 Paris cedex 13, France; Service de pneumologie et réanimation médicale, département "R3S" respiration, réanimation, réhabilitation, sommeil, groupe hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière Charles-Foix, AP-HP, 47-83 boulevard de l'Hôpital, 75013 Paris, France.
Encephale. 2018 Feb;44(1):75-82. doi: 10.1016/j.encep.2017.03.006. Epub 2017 May 5.
Mindfulness based interventions (MBI) have recently gained much interest in western medicine. MBSR paradigm is based on teaching participants to pay complete attention to the present experience and act nonjudgmentally towards stressful events. During this mental practice the meditator focuses his or her attention on the sensations of the body. While the distractions (mental images, thoughts, emotional or somatic states) arise the participant is taught to acknowledge discursive thoughts and cultivate the state of awareness without immediate reaction. The effectiveness of these programs is well documented in the field of emotional response regulation in depression (relapse prevention), anxiety disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder or eating disorders. Furthermore, converging lines of evidence support the hypothesis that mindfulness practice improves cognition, especially the ability to sustain attention and think in a more flexible manner. Nevertheless, formal rehabilitation programs targeting cognitive disturbances resulting from psychiatric (depression, disorder bipolar, schizophrenia) or neurologic conditions (brain injury, dementia) seldom rely on MBI principles. This review of literature aims at discussing possible links between MBI and clinical neuropsychology.
We conducted a review of literature using electronic databases up to December 2016, screening studies with variants of the keywords ("Mindfulness", "MBI", "MBSR", "Meditation") OR/AND ("Cognition", "Attention", "Executive function", "Memory", "Learning") RESULTS: In the first part, we describe key concepts of the neuropsychology of attention in the light of Posner's model of attention control. We also underline the potential scope of different therapeutic contexts where disturbances of attention may be clinically relevant. Second, we review the efficacy of MBI in the field of cognition (thinking disturbances, attention biases, memory and executive processes impairment or low metacognitive abilities), mood (emotional dysregulation, anxiety, depression, mood shifts) and somatic preoccupations (stress induced immune dysregulation, chronic pain, body representation, eating disorders, sleep quality, fatigue). In psychiatry, these three components closely coexist and interact which explains the complexity of patient assessment and care. Numerous studies show that meditation inspired interventions offer a promising solution in the prevention and rehabilitation of cognitive impairment. In the last part, we discuss the benefits and risks of integrating meditation practice into broader programs of cognitive remediation and therapeutic education in patients suffering from cognitive disorders. We propose a number of possible guidelines for developing mindfulness inspired cognitive remediation tools. Along with Jon Kabatt Zinn (Kabatt-Zinn & Maskens, 2012), we suggest that the construction of neuropsychological tools relies on seven attitudinal foundations of mindfulness practice.
This paper highlights the importance of referring to holistic approaches such as MBI when dealing with patients with neuropsychological impairment, especially in the field of psychiatry. We advocate introducing mindfulness principles in order to help patients stabilize their attention and improve cognitive flexibility. We believe this transition in neuropsychological care may offer an interesting paradigm shift promoting a more efficient approach towards cognition and its links to emotion, body, and environment.
基于正念的干预措施(MBI)最近在西方医学中备受关注。正念减压疗法(MBSR)范式基于教导参与者完全关注当下的体验,并对压力事件不作评判地做出反应。在这种心理练习中,冥想者将注意力集中在身体的感觉上。当分心因素(心理意象、想法、情绪或躯体状态)出现时,参与者被教导要承认散漫的想法,并培养一种不立即反应的觉察状态。这些项目的有效性在抑郁症(预防复发)、焦虑症、强迫症或饮食失调的情绪反应调节领域有充分的文献记载。此外,越来越多的证据支持这样的假设,即正念练习可以改善认知,特别是维持注意力和以更灵活方式思考的能力。然而,针对由精神疾病(抑郁症、双相情感障碍、精神分裂症)或神经疾病(脑损伤、痴呆)导致的认知障碍的正式康复项目很少依赖MBI原则。这篇文献综述旨在探讨MBI与临床神经心理学之间可能的联系。
我们使用电子数据库对截至2016年12月的文献进行了综述,筛选包含关键词变体(“正念”、“MBI”、“MBSR”、“冥想”)或/和(“认知”、“注意力”、“执行功能”、“记忆”、“学习”)的研究。结果:在第一部分,我们根据波斯纳的注意力控制模型描述了注意力神经心理学的关键概念。我们还强调了注意力障碍在临床上可能相关的不同治疗背景的潜在范围。其次,我们综述了MBI在认知领域(思维障碍、注意力偏差、记忆和执行过程受损或元认知能力低下)、情绪(情绪失调、焦虑、抑郁、情绪波动)和躯体关注(压力诱导的免疫失调、慢性疼痛、身体表征、饮食失调、睡眠质量、疲劳)方面的疗效。在精神病学中,这三个成分密切共存并相互作用,这解释了患者评估和护理的复杂性。大量研究表明,受冥想启发的干预措施在认知障碍的预防和康复方面提供了一个有前景的解决方案。在最后一部分,我们讨论了将冥想练习纳入患有认知障碍患者的更广泛认知康复和治疗教育项目的益处和风险。我们提出了一些开发受正念启发的认知康复工具的可能指导方针。与乔恩·卡巴金(卡巴金和马斯肯斯,2012年)一样,我们建议神经心理学工具的构建依赖于正念练习的七个态度基础。
本文强调了在处理患有神经心理障碍的患者时,尤其是在精神病学领域,采用如MBI这样的整体方法的重要性。我们主张引入正念原则,以帮助患者稳定注意力并提高认知灵活性。我们相信神经心理护理的这种转变可能会带来一个有趣的范式转变,促进对认知及其与情绪、身体和环境的联系采取更有效的方法。