Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Centre for Mindfulness, Department of Psychiatry, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
BMC Psychol. 2023 Jul 1;11(1):194. doi: 10.1186/s40359-023-01220-4.
Stress-related disorders are a growing public health concern. While stress is a natural and adaptive process, chronic exposure to stressors can lead to dysregulation and take a cumulative toll on physical and mental well-being. One approach to coping with stress and building resilience is through Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR). By understanding the neural mechanisms of MBSR, we can gain insight into how it reduces stress and what drives individual differences in treatment outcomes. This study aims to establish the clinical effects of MBSR on stress regulation in a population that is susceptible to develop stress-related disorders (i.e., university students with mild to high self-reported stress), to assess the role of large-scale brain networks in stress regulation changes induced by MBSR, and to identify who may benefit most from MBSR.
This study is a longitudinal two-arm randomised, wait-list controlled trial to investigate the effects of MBSR on a preselected, Dutch university student population with elevated stress levels. Clinical symptoms are measured at baseline, post-treatment, and three months after training. Our primary clinical symptom is perceived stress, with additional measures of depressive and anxiety symptoms, alcohol use, stress resilience, positive mental health, and stress reactivity in daily life. We investigate the effects of MBSR on stress regulation in terms of behaviour, self-report measures, physiology, and brain activity. Repetitive negative thinking, cognitive reactivity, emotional allowance, mindfulness skills, and self-compassion will be tested as potential mediating factors for the clinical effects of MBSR. Childhood trauma, personality traits and baseline brain activity patterns will be tested as potential moderators of the clinical outcomes.
This study aims to provide valuable insights into the effectiveness of MBSR in reducing stress-related symptoms in a susceptible student population and crucially, to investigate its effects on stress regulation, and to identify who may benefit most from the intervention.
Registered on September 15, 2022, at clinicaltrials.gov, NCT05541263 .
与压力相关的障碍是一个日益严重的公共卫生问题。虽然压力是一种自然和适应的过程,但长期暴露于压力源会导致失调,并对身心健康造成累积性的影响。应对压力和建立韧性的一种方法是通过正念减压(MBSR)。通过了解 MBSR 的神经机制,我们可以深入了解它如何减轻压力以及是什么驱动了治疗结果的个体差异。这项研究旨在确定 MBSR 对易患与压力相关障碍的人群(即有轻度至高度自我报告压力的大学生)的压力调节的临床效果,评估大规模脑网络在 MBSR 诱导的压力调节变化中的作用,并确定谁可能从 MBSR 中获益最多。
这是一项纵向的、双臂随机、等待名单对照试验,旨在研究 MBSR 对一个有升高压力水平的荷兰大学生人群的影响。临床症状在基线、治疗后和训练后三个月进行测量。我们的主要临床症状是感知压力,还有抑郁和焦虑症状、酒精使用、压力韧性、积极心理健康和日常生活中的压力反应等附加测量。我们研究了 MBSR 对压力调节的影响,包括行为、自我报告测量、生理和大脑活动。重复消极思维、认知反应、情绪允许、正念技能和自我同情将作为 MBSR 临床效果的潜在中介因素进行测试。童年创伤、人格特质和基线大脑活动模式将作为临床结果的潜在调节因素进行测试。
这项研究旨在提供有价值的见解,了解 MBSR 在减少易感学生人群中与压力相关的症状方面的有效性,并且至关重要的是,研究其对压力调节的影响,并确定谁可能从干预中获益最多。
于 2022 年 9 月 15 日在 clinicaltrials.gov 上注册,NCT05541263。