Ayache Samar S, Chalah Moussa A
Department of Neurology, Gilbert and Rose-Marie Chagoury School of Medicine, Lebanese American University, Byblos, Lebanon.
Institut de la Colonne Vertébrale et des NeuroSciences (ICVNS), Centre Médico-Chirurgical Bizet, Paris, France.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2025 Feb 7;19:1552494. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2025.1552494. eCollection 2025.
Alexithymia denotes the "absence" of "words" for "emotion" and has its roots in the Greek words "a," "lexis," and "thymos." It is sometimes referred to as "emotional blindness," "blunted feeling," or "disrupted emotional awareness." The term "alexithymia" first appeared in the 1970s in the works of Sifneos, Nemiah, and colleagues. It entails difficulties in identifying and expressing emotions and an externally oriented thinking style. It is not a psychiatric disorder but rather a multidimensional personality trait or construct, appearing to be normally distributed in the general population, with high levels of alexithymia in approximately 10% of individuals. Evidence suggests that alexithymia serves as a prognostic risk factor for health problems, a transdiagnostic risk factor for emotion-based psychopathologies, and a predictor of poor psychiatric treatment outcomes. It is frequently observed in neurological diseases. Nevertheless, its mechanisms, assessment, and management remain overlooked. In multiple sclerosis (MS), an autoimmune disease of the central nervous system, alexithymia seems to occur in up to 53% of patients. However, it remains understudied despite recent growing interest. In this mini review, we briefly reassess the prevalence, as well as the clinical, sociodemographic and neuropsychological correlates of alexithymia in MS (e.g., anxiety, depression, fatigue, socio-emotional outcomes). This is followed by an analysis of neurobiological underpinnings of alexithymia derived from neurophysiological and neuroimaging studies in this clinical population. Finally, we provide perspectives to guide future research exploring and managing alexithymia in MS.
述情障碍指的是用于描述“情感”的“词汇”的“缺失”,其根源来自希腊语中的“a”“lexis”和“thymos”。它有时被称为“情感盲视”“情感迟钝”或“情感意识紊乱”。“述情障碍”一词最早于20世纪70年代出现在西夫neos、内米亚等人的著作中。它包括识别和表达情感方面的困难以及一种外向型思维方式。它不是一种精神障碍,而是一种多维度的人格特质或结构,似乎在普通人群中呈正态分布,约10%的个体述情障碍水平较高。有证据表明,述情障碍是健康问题的预后风险因素、基于情感的精神病理学的跨诊断风险因素以及精神科治疗效果不佳的预测指标。它在神经系统疾病中经常出现。然而,其机制、评估和管理仍然被忽视。在多发性硬化症(MS)这种中枢神经系统的自身免疫性疾病中,高达53%的患者似乎会出现述情障碍。然而,尽管最近人们的兴趣日益浓厚,但对其研究仍不充分。在这篇小型综述中,我们简要重新评估了MS中述情障碍的患病率,以及其临床、社会人口学和神经心理学相关性(如焦虑、抑郁、疲劳、社会情感结果)。接下来分析了来自该临床人群神经生理学和神经影像学研究的述情障碍的神经生物学基础。最后,我们提供了一些观点,以指导未来探索和管理MS中述情障碍的研究。