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Responses to stress in patients with psychotic disorders compared to persons with varying levels of vulnerability to psychosis, persons with depression and healthy controls.

Authors :
Lincoln, Tania M.
Köther, Ulf
Hartmann, Maike
Kempkensteffen, Jürgen
Moritz, Steffen
Source :
Journal of Behavior Therapy & Experimental Psychiatry. Jun2015, Vol. 47, p92-101. 10p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background and Objectives An experimental design was used to test whether self-reported, psychophysiological and symptomatic stress-responses increase as a function of the underlying vulnerability to psychosis as proposed by vulnerability-stress-models. Methods Stress-responses of participants with psychotic disorders ( PSY , n = 35) were compared to those of participants with attenuated positive symptoms ( AS , n = 29), first-degree relatives of persons with psychotic disorders ( REL , n = 26), healthy controls ( HC , n = 28) and controls with depression ( DEP , n = 30). Using a repeated measures design, participants were assigned to a noise stressor, a social stressor and a no stress condition in random order. Stress-responses were assessed via self-report, salivary cortisol levels, heart rate and skin conductance levels. State-paranoia and depression were assessed with clinical scales. Results PSY reported to be significantly more stressed than HC , AS and REL across all conditions which went along with increased heart rate and decreased overall cortisol release. In contrast, AS showed elevated levels of cortisol. PSY showed a stronger response of self-reported stress to the noise condition compared to the no stress condition than HC , but no stronger response than the other samples. Furthermore, the stressors did not trigger stronger psychophysiological responses or symptom-increases in PSY . Limitations The social stressor was brief and not individualized and did not have an effect on cortisol. Conclusions The findings support the notion that subjective stress-responsiveness increases with vulnerability, but not the assumption that symptoms arise directly as a function of stress and vulnerability. Also, the generally high levels of arousal seem to be more relevant to psychosis than the responsiveness to specific stressors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00057916
Volume :
47
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Behavior Therapy & Experimental Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
100851127
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbtep.2014.11.011