Jáuregui-Renaud Kathrine, García-Jacuinde Dulce Maria, Bárcenas-Olvera Simón Pedro, Gresty Michael A, Gutiérrez-Márquez Aralia
Unidad de Investigación Médica en Otoneurología, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Mexico City, Mexico.
Departamento de Audiología y Otoneurología, Hospital General del Centro Médico Nacional "La Raza", Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Mexico City, Mexico.
Front Neurol. 2024 Apr 3;15:1365745. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2024.1365745. eCollection 2024.
In subjects with peripheral vestibular disease and controls, we assessed: 1. The relationship between spatial anxiety and perceived stress, and 2. The combined contribution of spatial anxiety, spatial perspective-taking, and individual cofactors to dizziness-related handicap. 309 adults participated in the study (153 with and 156 without peripheral vestibular disease), including patients with bilateral vestibular deficiency, unilateral deficiency (evolution <3 or ≥3 months), Meniere's disease, and Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo. Assessments included: general health, personal habits, spatial anxiety (3-domains), perceived stress, spatial perspective-taking, dizziness-related handicap (3-domains), unsteadiness, sleep quality, motion sickness susceptibility, trait anxiety/depression, state anxiety, depersonalization/derealization. After bivariate analyses, analysis of covariance was performed ( ≤ 0.05). Spatial anxiety was related to unsteadiness and perceived stress, with an inverse relationship with trait anxiety (ANCoVA, adjusted = 0.27-0.30, = 17.945-20.086, < 0.00001). Variability on perspective-taking was related to vestibular disease, trait and state anxiety, motion sickness susceptibility, and age (ANCoVA, adjusted = 0.18, = 5.834, < 0.00001). All domains of spatial anxiety contributed to the Physical domain of dizziness-related handicap, while the Navigation domain contributed to the Functional domain of handicap. Handicap variability was also related to unsteadiness, spatial perspective-taking, quality of sleep, and trait anxiety/depression (ANCoVA, adjusted = 0.66, = 39.07, < 0.00001). Spatial anxiety is related to perceived stress in adults both with and without vestibular disease, subjects with trait anxiety rated lower on spatial anxiety. State anxiety and acute stress could be helpful for recovery after peripheral vestibular lesion. Spatial anxiety and perspective-taking contribute to the Physical and Functional domains of dizziness-related handicap, possibly because it discourages behavior beneficial to adaptation.
在患有外周前庭疾病的受试者和对照组中,我们评估了:1. 空间焦虑与感知压力之间的关系,以及2. 空间焦虑、空间换位思考和个体辅助因素对头晕相关障碍的综合影响。309名成年人参与了这项研究(153名患有外周前庭疾病,156名未患),包括双侧前庭功能减退、单侧功能减退(病程<3个月或≥3个月)、梅尼埃病和良性阵发性位置性眩晕患者。评估内容包括:一般健康状况、个人习惯、空间焦虑(三个维度)、感知压力、空间换位思考、头晕相关障碍(三个维度)、步态不稳、睡眠质量、晕动病易感性、特质焦虑/抑郁、状态焦虑、人格解体/现实解体。在双变量分析之后,进行了协方差分析(≤0.05)。空间焦虑与步态不稳和感知压力有关,与特质焦虑呈负相关(协方差分析,调整后=0.27 - 0.30,=17.945 - 20.086,<0.00001)。换位思考的变异性与前庭疾病、特质和状态焦虑、晕动病易感性以及年龄有关(协方差分析,调整后=0.18,=5.834,<0.00001)。空间焦虑的所有维度都对头晕相关障碍的身体维度有影响,而导航维度对障碍的功能维度有影响。障碍变异性也与步态不稳、空间换位思考、睡眠质量以及特质焦虑/抑郁有关(协方差分析,调整后=0.66,=39.07,<0.00001)。空间焦虑与患有和未患有前庭疾病的成年人的感知压力有关,特质焦虑的受试者在空间焦虑方面得分较低。状态焦虑和急性应激可能有助于外周前庭病变后的恢复。空间焦虑和换位思考对头晕相关障碍的身体和功能维度有影响,可能是因为它阻碍了有利于适应的行为。