Unravelling the influence of affective stimulation on functional neurological symptoms: a pilot experiment examining potential mechanisms

Author:

Pick SusannahORCID,Millman LS MerrittORCID,Ward Emily,Short Eleanor,Stanton BibaORCID,Reinders AAT Simone,Winston Joel SORCID,Nicholson Timothy RORCID,Edwards Mark JORCID,Goldstein Laura HORCID,David Anthony SORCID,Chalder TrudieORCID,Hotopf MatthewORCID,Mehta Mitul AORCID

Abstract

BackgroundDifferences in affective processing have previously been shown in functional neurological disorder (FND); however, the mechanistic relevance is uncertain. We tested the hypotheses that highly arousing affective stimulation would result in elevated subjective functional neurological symptoms (FNS), and this would be associated with elevated autonomic reactivity. The possible influence of cognitive detachment was also explored.MethodIndividuals diagnosed with FND (motor symptoms/seizures; n=14) and healthy controls (n=14) viewed Positive, Negative and Neutral images in blocks, while passively observing the stimuli (‘Watch’) or detaching themselves (‘Distance’). The FND group rated their primary FNS, and all participants rated subjective physical (arousal, pain, fatigue) and psychological states (positive/negative affect, dissociation), immediately after each block. Skin conductance (SC) and heart rate (HR) were monitored continuously.ResultsFNS ratings were higher after Negative compared with Positive and Neutral blocks in the FND group (p=0.002, ηp2=0.386); however, this effect was diminished in the Distance condition relative to the Watch condition (p=0.018, ηp2=0.267). SC and/or HR correlated with FNS ratings in the Negative-Watch and Neutral-Distance conditions (r values=0.527–0.672, p values=0.006–0.035). The groups did not differ in subjective affect or perceived arousal (p values=0.541–0.919, ηp2=<0.001–0.015).ConclusionsEmotionally significant events may exert an influence on FNS which is related to autonomic activation rather than altered subjective affect or perceived arousal. This influence may be modulated by cognitive detachment. Further work is needed to determine the relevance and neural bases of these processes in specific FND phenotypes.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research Biomedical Research Centre at the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London

Medical Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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