8 results on '"Pellegatta G"'
Search Results
2. Author Index.
- Subjects
BAR codes - Published
- 2023
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3. Effect of slow, deep breathing on visceral pain perception and its underlying psychophysiological mechanisms.
- Author
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Gholamrezaei, Ali, Van Diest, Ilse, Aziz, Qasim, Pauwels, Ans, Tack, Jan, Vlaeyen, Johan W. S., and Van Oudenhove, Lukas
- Subjects
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY ,VISCERAL pain ,PAIN perception ,HEART beat ,PAIN ,RESPIRATION ,PAIN catastrophizing - Abstract
Background: Studies using somatic pain models have shown the hypoalgesic effects of slow, deep breathing. We evaluated the effect of slow, deep breathing on visceral pain and explored putative mediating mechanisms including autonomic and emotional responses. Methods: Fifty‐seven healthy volunteers (36 females, mean age = 22.0 years) performed controlled, deep breathing at a slow frequency (6 breaths per minute), controlled breathing at a normal frequency (14 breaths per minute; active control), and uncontrolled breathing (no‐treatment control) in randomized order. Moderate painful stimuli were given during each condition by delivering electrical stimulation in the distal esophagus. Participants rated pain intensity after each stimulation. Heart rate variability and self‐reported arousal were measured during each condition. Key Results: Compared to uncontrolled breathing, pain intensity was lower during slow, deep breathing (Cohen's d = 0.40) and normal controlled breathing (d = 0.47), but not different between slow, deep breathing and normal controlled breathing. Arousal was lower (d = 0.53, 0.55) and heart rate variability was higher (d = 0.70, 0.86) during slow, deep breathing compared to the two control conditions. The effect of slow, deep breathing on pain was not mediated by alterations in heart rate variability or arousal but was moderated by pain catastrophizing. Conclusions and Inferences: Slow, deep breathing can reduce visceral pain intensity. However, the effect is not specific to the slow breathing frequency and is not mediated by autonomic or emotional responses, suggesting other underlying mechanisms (notably distraction). Whether a long‐term practice of slow, deep breathing can influence (clinical) visceral pain warrants to be investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Author Index.
- Subjects
AUTHORS - Published
- 2021
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5. Anxiety and depression in irritable bowel syndrome: Exploring the interaction with other symptoms and pathophysiology using multivariate analyses.
- Author
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Midenfjord, Irina, Polster, Annikka, Sjövall, Henrik, Törnblom, Hans, and Simrén, Magnus
- Subjects
IRRITABLE colon ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,ANXIETY ,PATHOLOGICAL physiology ,MENTAL depression ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background: Anxiety or depression, in other words, psychological distress, are common comorbidities in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), but their interaction with pathophysiological factors and other symptoms are unclear. Methods: Patients with IBS (Rome III criteria), thoroughly characterized regarding pathophysiology (colonic transit time, visceral sensitivity, and autonomic nervous system [ANS] function), symptom profile (IBS severity, somatic symptoms, gastrointestinal [GI]‐specific anxiety and fatigue), and quality of life, were explored for differences regarding pathophysiology and symptoms between patients with and without reported psychological distress in univariate and multivariate analyses (Principal Component Analysis [PCA] with Hotelling's T2 and Orthogonal Partial Least Squares‐Discriminant Analysis [OPLS‐DA]). Key Results: When using Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale score ≥8 as cut‐off score, including both borderline and clinically significant cases, 345 (44.9%) out of 769 IBS patients reported anxiety, and 198 (25.7%) depression. In univariate analyses, patients reporting psychological distress demonstrated more severe GI and non‐GI symptoms, fatigue, GI‐specific anxiety and lower quality of life, and differences for some pathophysiological measures. IBS patients with and without reported psychological distress showed significant differences between the multivariate means in symptom reporting (PCA; both P < 0.001), and in pathophysiological measures in patients with and without anxiety (P = 0.018). Visceral hypersensitivity, altered ANS function, more severe GI‐specific anxiety, fatigue, and higher somatic non‐GI symptoms were the factors that most strongly separated patients with and without psychological distress (OPLS‐DA). Conclusions and Inferences: Reported anxiety and depression are common in IBS patients, and our study demonstrates that they are interwoven in the complex pathophysiological and clinical picture of IBS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Emotional overactivity in patients with irritable bowel syndrome.
- Author
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Fournier, A., Mondillon, L., Dantzer, C., Gauchez, A.‐S., Ducros, V., Mathieu, N., Faure, P., Canini, F., Bonaz, B., and Pellissier, S.
- Subjects
IRRITABLE colon ,NEGATIVISM ,HEART rate monitoring ,PARASYMPATHETIC nervous system ,EMOTIONS ,ANXIETY - Abstract
Background: Negativity is often observed in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). No study has examined their emotional expressiveness as a marker of emotional reactivity. We investigated IBS patients’ vulnerability to an emotional load by associating their expressiveness with psychological and neurophysiological assessments. We hypothesized that IBS would be characterized by a lack of expressiveness coupled with high scores in psychological and neurophysiological parameters. Methods: We assessed the emotional facial expressions (EMFACS), psychological (anxiety, depression, alexithymia), and neurophysiological (cortisol, heart rate variability (HRV)) parameters of 25 IBS patients and 26 healthy controls (HC) while they watched fear‐eliciting movie extracts. Key Results: Overall, the task elicited an increase in state anxiety and consistent HRV responses. However, IBS patients differed from HC as they displayed more sadness and tended to display more rage. Contrary to HC, IBS patients showed an increase in heart rate and a decrease in parasympathetic regulation, reflecting an enhanced responsiveness corroborated by higher scores in depression and state anxiety. Consistent with their higher difficulty in identifying feelings, a component of alexithymia positively correlated with their expressions of rage, they were not aware of their increase in anxiety during the task, whereas HC were. No linear relationship between patients’ expressions and their neurophysiological responses was found. Conclusions & Inferences: Irritable bowel syndrome patients displayed greater emotional expressiveness with negative prevalence. This reflects an emotional vulnerability potentially related to low regulation skills and underscores the importance of considering the central dysregulation hypothesis in IBS as a promising avenue of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. The role of the SCN5A-encoded channelopathy in irritable bowel syndrome and other gastrointestinal disorders.
- Author
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Verstraelen, T. E., Bekke, R. M. A., Volders, P. G. A., Masclee, A. A. M., and Kruimel, J. W.
- Subjects
IRRITABLE colon treatment ,FUNCTIONAL colonic diseases ,GASTROINTESTINAL motility ,SODIUM channels ,DISEASE prevalence ,QUALITY of life ,MEDICAL care costs ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background Gastrointestinal functional and motility disorders, like irritable bowel syndrome ( IBS), have a high prevalence in the Western population and cause significant morbidity and loss of quality of life leading to considerable costs for health care. A decade ago, it has been demonstrated that interstitial cells of Cajal and intestinal smooth muscle cells, cells important for gastrointestinal motility, express the sodium channel alpha subunit Na
v 1.5. In the heart, aberrant variants in this sodium channel, encoded by SCN5A, are linked to inherited arrhythmia syndromes, like the long- QT syndrome type 3 and Brugada syndrome. Mounting data show a possible contribution of SCN5A mutants to gastrointestinal functional and motility disorders. Two percent of IBS patients harbor SCN5A mutations with electrophysiological evidence of loss- and gain-of-function. In addition, gastrointestinal symptoms are more prevalent in cardiac SCN5A-mutation positive patients. Purpose This review firstly describes the Nav 1.5 channel and its physiological role in ventricular cardiomyocytes and gastrointestinal cells, then we focus on the involvement of mutant Nav 1.5 in gastrointestinal functional and motility disorders. Future research might uncover novel mutation-specific treatment strategies for SCN5A-encoded gastrointestinal channelopathies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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8. Exercise therapy of patients with irritable bowel syndrome: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials.
- Author
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Zhou, Changli, Li, Yuewei, Jia, Yong, Li, Feng, and Zhao, Enfa
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EXERCISE therapy ,IRRITABLE colon ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,META-analysis ,AMED (Information retrieval system) ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Background: As drug use has limitations in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), increasing attention is being paid to nondrug therapies and complementary treatments, especially exercise. It is known that bowel movements are more frequent and colon transit is more rapid in physically active individuals than in sedentary individuals. However, the effects of exercise on IBS are unclear. Purpose: We conducted a systematic review to assess the effects of exercise on IBS. Methods: We searched PubMed, Web of Science, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, and two Chinese databases (Wanfang Database and Chinese Biomedical Literature [CBM]) for eligible studies. We extracted and pooled relevant information regarding the effects of exercise in patients with IBS. The primary outcomes were gastrointestinal symptoms, quality of life, depression, and anxiety. Key Results: A total of 683 patients with IBS from 14 randomized controlled trials met our inclusion criteria. The exercise interventions in this review were yoga, walking/aerobic physical activity, Tai Ji, mountaineering, and Baduanjin qigong activity. The results of this review suggested exercise had significant benefits for patients with IBS, but studies were limited by the strong risk of bias. Conclusions and Inferences: Our findings suggest that exercise is potentially a feasible and effective treatment for IBS patients. However, because of methodologic issues, no firm conclusions could be drawn about the true effects of this intervention. Researchers should design a rigorous study to assess the effects of exercise on IBS. Our findings suggest that exercise might be a feasible and effective treatment approach in patients with IBS. However, no firm recommendation could be made based on the results of our study. Researchers should design a rigorous study to assess the effects of exercise on IBS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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