The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Brain and Mind Research Institute, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2021 Nov-Dec;73:64-70. doi: 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2021.09.009. Epub 2021 Sep 28.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a behavioral intervention demonstrating sustained improvements in anxiety in individuals with chronic anxiety and psychological distress. Because anxiety disorders are associated with the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD), we hypothesized that a novel 1-day ACT workshop would both lower anxiety and improve vascular function in persons with moderate/high anxiety.
In a randomized controlled study, 72 adults (age 33.9 ± 8.6 (SD) years) with baseline moderate/high anxiety completed a one-day ACT intervention (n = 44, age 33.9 ± 8.7 years) or control (n = 28, age 37.1 ± 10.1 years). Pre-specified secondary outcomes were measured over 12 weeks: aortic stiffness (carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity [cfPWV]), forearm vascular endothelial function (post-ischemic peak forearm blood flow [FBF] via plethysmography), and brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD). Carotid artery stiffness (β-stiffness index), and inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein and tumor necrosis factor-alpha) were also explored.
Although the intervention had a significant and sustained effect on the primary outcome of anxiety as measured by the Beck Anxiety Inventory, the 1-day ACT workshop was not associated with improvement in vascular or inflammatory endpoints. The intervention was unexpectedly associated with increases in β-stiffness index that were also associated with changing trait anxiety.
Anxiety improvements did not translate into improvements in any of the vascular function outcomes. This may reflect a less-than-robust effect of the intervention on anxiety, failure in design to select those with vascular dysfunction, or not intervening on a relevant causal pathway. (Trial registration NCT02915874 at www.clinicaltrials.gov).
接受和承诺疗法(ACT)是一种行为干预措施,可在患有慢性焦虑和心理困扰的个体中持续改善焦虑。由于焦虑障碍与心血管疾病(CVD)的发展相关,我们假设新的为期一天的 ACT 工作坊不仅会降低焦虑,而且会改善中度/高度焦虑者的血管功能。
在一项随机对照研究中,72 名成年人(年龄 33.9±8.6(SD)岁)基线时具有中度/高度焦虑,完成了为期一天的 ACT 干预(n=44,年龄 33.9±8.7 岁)或对照(n=28,年龄 37.1±10.1 岁)。预先指定的次要结局在 12 周内进行测量:主动脉僵硬(颈动脉-股动脉脉搏波速度[cfPWV])、前臂血管内皮功能(通过体积描记法测量缺血后峰值前臂血流[FBF])和肱动脉血流介导的扩张(FMD)。还探讨了颈动脉僵硬(β-僵硬指数)和炎症标志物(C 反应蛋白和肿瘤坏死因子-α)。
尽管干预对贝克焦虑量表(Beck Anxiety Inventory)测量的焦虑主要结局有显著且持续的影响,但为期一天的 ACT 工作坊与血管或炎症终点的改善无关。该干预出乎意料地与β-僵硬指数的增加相关,而β-僵硬指数的增加也与特质焦虑的变化相关。
焦虑的改善并没有转化为任何血管功能结局的改善。这可能反映了干预对焦虑的影响不够强,或者在设计上未能选择那些有血管功能障碍的患者,或者没有干预相关的因果途径。(试验注册 NCT02915874,可在 www.clinicaltrials.gov 上查阅)。