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Emotional arousal in patients with functional movement disorders: A pupillometry study

M. Slovák, J. Anýž, J. Erlebach, T. Sieger, Z. Forejtová, V. Fabián, T. Rošíková, L. Nováková, E. Růžička, MJ. Edwards, T. Serranová

. 2022 ; 162 (-) : 111043. [pub] 20220916

Jazyk angličtina Země Anglie, Velká Británie

Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem

Perzistentní odkaz   https://www.medvik.cz/link/bmc22032819

OBJECTIVE: Pathophysiology explanations for functional movement disorders often assume a role for emotional hyperarousal. Pupillometry is a validated method for evaluation of emotional arousal by detecting changes in pupil size in response to emotional stimuli. In a case-control study design, we aimed to study objective and subjective emotional arousal using pupillometry and affective ratings. To assess attentional engagement by affective stimuli, we used videooculographic tracking of eye movement patterns (scanpath). METHODS: Twenty-five female patients with functional movement disorders (mean age: 40.9 [SD 12.7] years) and 23 age matched healthy female controls participated in the study. Using infrared high-resolution eye-tracker, both pupil size and eye movement pattern in response to emotionally charged erotic, adventure, threat, victim, and neutral pictures were recorded along with subjective ratings of emotional valence and arousal of the presented pictures. RESULTS: A between-group comparison showed significantly smaller pupil dilation to adventure stimuli compared to neutral stimuli in patients compared to controls (P < 0.004, bootstrap, uncorr., adj. η2 = 0.00). No significant difference in pupillary response to other stimuli and scanpath parameters was found between the groups. Patients rated significantly lower emotional arousal to erotic pictures than controls (P < 0.001, bootstrap, uncorr., adj. η2 = 0.09). CONCLUSION: This study did not find evidence of autonomous or subjective emotional hyperarousal. The mismatch between objective autonomic measures and subjective arousal ratings in patients is of pathophysiological interest and in line with recent findings of impaired interoception in functional movement disorders.

Citace poskytuje Crossref.org

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$a Emotional arousal in patients with functional movement disorders: A pupillometry study / $c M. Slovák, J. Anýž, J. Erlebach, T. Sieger, Z. Forejtová, V. Fabián, T. Rošíková, L. Nováková, E. Růžička, MJ. Edwards, T. Serranová
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$a OBJECTIVE: Pathophysiology explanations for functional movement disorders often assume a role for emotional hyperarousal. Pupillometry is a validated method for evaluation of emotional arousal by detecting changes in pupil size in response to emotional stimuli. In a case-control study design, we aimed to study objective and subjective emotional arousal using pupillometry and affective ratings. To assess attentional engagement by affective stimuli, we used videooculographic tracking of eye movement patterns (scanpath). METHODS: Twenty-five female patients with functional movement disorders (mean age: 40.9 [SD 12.7] years) and 23 age matched healthy female controls participated in the study. Using infrared high-resolution eye-tracker, both pupil size and eye movement pattern in response to emotionally charged erotic, adventure, threat, victim, and neutral pictures were recorded along with subjective ratings of emotional valence and arousal of the presented pictures. RESULTS: A between-group comparison showed significantly smaller pupil dilation to adventure stimuli compared to neutral stimuli in patients compared to controls (P < 0.004, bootstrap, uncorr., adj. η2 = 0.00). No significant difference in pupillary response to other stimuli and scanpath parameters was found between the groups. Patients rated significantly lower emotional arousal to erotic pictures than controls (P < 0.001, bootstrap, uncorr., adj. η2 = 0.09). CONCLUSION: This study did not find evidence of autonomous or subjective emotional hyperarousal. The mismatch between objective autonomic measures and subjective arousal ratings in patients is of pathophysiological interest and in line with recent findings of impaired interoception in functional movement disorders.
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$a Anýž, Jiří $u Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague, Department of Cybernetics, Prague, Czech Republic
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$a Erlebach, Jonáš $u Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague, Department of Economics, Management and Humanities, Prague, Czech Republic
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$a Sieger, Tomáš $u First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and General University Hospital in Prague, Department of Neurology and Centre of Clinical Neuroscience, Prague, Czech Republic; Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague, Department of Cybernetics, Prague, Czech Republic
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$a Růžička, Evžen $u First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and General University Hospital in Prague, Department of Neurology and Centre of Clinical Neuroscience, Prague, Czech Republic
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$a Edwards, Mark J $u Institute of Molecular and Clinical Sciences, St George's University of London, Neuroscience Research Centre, London, United Kingdom
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$a Serranová, Tereza $u First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and General University Hospital in Prague, Department of Neurology and Centre of Clinical Neuroscience, Prague, Czech Republic. Electronic address: tereza.serranova@vfn.cz
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