Stanghellini Giovanni, Ballerini Massimo, Mancini Milena
Department of Psychological Sciences, Health, Territory, G. d'Annunzio University of Chieti and Pescara, Chieti, Italy.
Centro de estudios de fenomenología y psiquiatría - Diego Portales' University, Santiago, Chile.
Front Psychiatry. 2019 Sep 12;10:630. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00630. eCollection 2019.
This article builds on and extends the 'optical-coenaesthetic disproportion' (OCDisp) hypothesis of feeding and eating disorders (FEDs) matching data obtained through clinical research with laboratory evidence from neuroscience and neuropsychological studies. The OCDisp hypothesis, developed through the assessment in clinical setting of bodily experience using the IDentity and EAting (IDEA) disorder questionnaire, argues that in persons with FED the internal perception of one's embodied self (i.e., coenaesthesia) is deeply affected (their possibility to feel themselves is weakened or threatened by coenaesthopathic and emotional paroxysms; their bodily feelings are discontinuous over time), and as a compensation to it, these persons experience their own body as an object that is looked at by others. To FED persons, their body is principally given to them as an object 'to be seen.' The other's look serves as an optical prosthesis to cope with hypo- and dis-coenaesthesia and as a device through which persons with FED can define themselves and attenuate the anxiety produced by the conflicts between being-oneself and being-for-others. After describing the OCDisp hypothesis, we will gather evidence supporting it with neuroscience studies on FED. Our focus will be on data pointing to dampened multisensory integration of interoceptive and esteroceptive signals, demonstrating a predominance of the visual afferents toward signals arising within the body. In the final part of the article, we will show consistencies but also draw distinctions between our clinical hypothesis and neuroscience-based data and hypotheses and draft a potential agenda for translational research inspired by these.
本文建立并扩展了饮食失调(FEDs)的“视觉-共同感觉失调”(OCDisp)假说,将临床研究获得的数据与神经科学和神经心理学研究的实验室证据相匹配。OCDisp假说是通过使用身份与饮食(IDEA)障碍问卷在临床环境中对身体体验进行评估而得出的,该假说认为,在患有饮食失调症的人中,对自身具身自我的内在感知(即共同感觉)受到了深刻影响(他们感受自身的可能性因共同感觉病态和情绪发作而减弱或受到威胁;他们的身体感觉随时间不连续),作为对此的补偿,这些人将自己的身体体验为被他人审视的对象。对于患有饮食失调症的人来说,他们的身体主要是作为一个“被观看”的对象呈现给他们的。他人的目光充当了一种视觉假体,以应对共同感觉减退和失调,并且是患有饮食失调症的人借此定义自己并减轻由自我存在与为他人存在之间的冲突所产生的焦虑的一种手段。在描述了OCDisp假说之后,我们将收集神经科学对饮食失调症的研究中支持该假说的证据。我们将重点关注指向内感受和外感受信号的多感觉整合减弱的数据,这表明视觉传入信号相对于身体内部产生的信号占主导地位。在本文的最后部分,我们将展示我们的临床假说与基于神经科学的数据和假说之间的一致性,但也会指出它们之间的区别,并起草一项受这些启发的转化研究潜在议程。