From the Section of Women's Mental Health, Health Service and Population Research Department, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience (Keynejad), Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine (Fenby), and Section of Cognitive Neuropsychiatry (Pick, Nicholson) and Departments of Psychology (Moss-Morris, Hirsch) and Psychological Medicine (Chalder, Hughes), Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
Psychosom Med. 2020 Jul/Aug;82(6):586-592. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000821.
Altered attentional processing (automatically attending to negative or illness-relevant information) and interpretative biases (interpreting ambiguous information as negative or illness relevant) may be mechanistically involved in functional neurological disorder (FND). Common mechanisms between FND and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) have been proposed but not compared experimentally.
We compared the cognitive task performance of FND, CFS, and healthy control (HC) groups. The tasks assessed attentional bias toward illness-relevant stimuli (visual probe task), attentional control (attention network task), and somatic interpretations (interpretative bias task), alongside self-reported depression, anxiety, fatigue, and general health.
Thirty-seven participants diagnosed with FND, 52 participants diagnosed with CFS, and 51 HC participants were included. Although participants with CFS showed attentional bias for illness-relevant stimuli relative to HC (t = -3.13, p = .002, d = 0.624), individuals with FND did not (t = -1.59, p = .118, d = 0.379). Both the FND (t = 3.08, p = .003, d = 0.759) and CFS (t = 2.74, p = .007, d = 0.548) groups displayed worse attentional control than did the HC group. Similarly, the FND (t = 3.63, p < .001, d = 0.801) and CFS groups (t = 4.58, p < .001, d = 0.909) showed more somatic interpretative bias than did the HC group.
Similar attentional control deficits and somatic interpretative bias in individuals with FND and CFS support potential shared mechanisms underlying symptoms. Interpretative bias toward somatic and illness-relevant stimuli in functional disorders may prove a therapeutic target.
注意力处理的改变(自动关注负面或与疾病相关的信息)和解释偏差(将模棱两可的信息解释为负面或与疾病相关)可能与功能性神经障碍(FND)有关。已经提出了 FND 和慢性疲劳综合征(CFS)之间的共同机制,但尚未进行实验比较。
我们比较了 FND、CFS 和健康对照组(HC)的认知任务表现。这些任务评估了对与疾病相关的刺激的注意力偏向(视觉探针任务)、注意力控制(注意力网络任务)和躯体解释(解释偏差任务),以及自我报告的抑郁、焦虑、疲劳和一般健康状况。
共纳入 37 名 FND 患者、52 名 CFS 患者和 51 名 HC 参与者。尽管 CFS 患者相对于 HC 表现出对与疾病相关的刺激的注意力偏向(t=-3.13,p=.002,d=0.624),但 FND 患者并未如此(t=-1.59,p=.118,d=0.379)。FND(t=3.08,p=.003,d=0.759)和 CFS(t=2.74,p=.007,d=0.548)组的注意力控制均明显差于 HC 组。同样,FND(t=3.63,p<0.001,d=0.801)和 CFS(t=4.58,p<0.001,d=0.909)组的躯体解释偏差也明显大于 HC 组。
FND 和 CFS 患者存在类似的注意力控制缺陷和躯体解释偏差,支持症状背后存在潜在的共同机制。对躯体和与疾病相关的刺激的解释偏差可能成为功能性障碍的治疗靶点。