Academic Neurology Unit, University of Sheffield, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Glossop Road, Sheffield, S10 2JF, United Kingdom.
School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Seizure. 2022 Jan;94:165-175. doi: 10.1016/j.seizure.2021.10.017. Epub 2021 Oct 25.
Psychogenic Nonepileptic Seizures (PNES) have been linked to dysregulated emotions and arousal. However, the question which emotions may be most relevant has received much less attention. In this multidisciplinary narrative review, we argue that the self-conscious emotion of shame is likely to be of particular importance for PNES. We summarize current concepts of the development of shame processing and its relationship with other emotional states. We demonstrate the potential of acute shame to cause a sudden disruption of normal cognitive function and trigger powerful behavioral, cognitive, physiological and secondary emotional responses which closely resemble key components of PNES. These responses may lead to the development of shame avoidance strategies which can become disabling in themselves. We discuss how excessive shame proneness and shame dysregulation are linked to several psychopathologies often associated with PNES (including depression and PTSD) and how they may predispose to, precipitate and perpetuate PNES disorders, not least by interacting with stigma. We consider current knowledge of the neurobiological underpinnings of shame and PNES. We explore how shame could be the link between PNES and a heterogeneous range of possible etiological factors, and how it may link historical aversive experiences with individual PNES events occurring much later and without apparent external trigger. We argue that, in view of the potential direct links between shame and PNES, the well-documented associations of shame with common comorbidities of this seizure disorder and the well-characterized relationship between chronic shame and stigma, there is a compelling case to pay greater attention to shame in relation to PNES. Its role in the treatment of patients with PNES is discussed in a separate, linked review incorporating case vignettes to highlight the complex interactions of different but interlinked shame-related issues in individual patients.
心因性非癫痫性发作 (PNES) 与情绪和觉醒失调有关。然而,哪种情绪可能最为重要,这一问题受到的关注要少得多。在这篇多学科的叙述性综述中,我们认为,羞耻这种自我意识情绪可能对 PNES 尤其重要。我们总结了目前对羞耻处理的发展及其与其他情绪状态的关系的概念。我们展示了急性羞耻感可能导致正常认知功能突然中断,并引发类似 PNES 关键成分的强大行为、认知、生理和继发情绪反应的潜力。这些反应可能导致羞耻回避策略的发展,而这些策略本身可能会变得具有致残性。我们讨论了过度的羞耻易感性和羞耻失调如何与几种常与 PNES 相关的精神病理学(包括抑郁和 PTSD)有关,以及它们如何通过与耻辱相互作用而导致、促成和延续 PNES 障碍。我们考虑了目前对羞耻和 PNES 神经生物学基础的了解。我们探讨了羞耻感如何成为 PNES 与可能的病因学因素之间的联系,以及它如何将历史上的厌恶经历与发生在很久之后且没有明显外部诱因的个体 PNES 事件联系起来。我们认为,鉴于羞耻感与 PNES 之间可能存在直接联系,以及羞耻感与这种癫痫发作障碍的常见合并症之间的已有关联,以及慢性羞耻感和耻辱之间的关系已得到很好的描述,因此有充分的理由在 PNES 中更加关注羞耻感。另一篇单独的综述文章讨论了其在 PNES 患者治疗中的作用,其中包含病例简介,以突出不同但相互关联的羞耻相关问题在个体患者中的复杂相互作用。