Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10304192 | Psychiatry Research | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
This study aimed to explore changes in heart rate variability (HRV), a proxy for parasympathetic activity characterizing emotion regulation processes before, during and after negative emotional induction in patients suffering from restrictive type anorexia nervosa (AN-RT). We compared two methods of HRV analysis, the Fast Fourier Transform high frequency (FFT-HF) and a specific HRV high frequency analysis technique, namely, the wavelet transform HRV (WT-HRV). A sample of 16 inpatients with AN-RT was compared to 24 control participants. Heart rate (HR) was continuously recorded for 5Â min before the beginning of the video until 5Â min after the video. The participants answered questionnaires concerning their eating behaviors, mood disorders and difficulties in emotion regulation. During the entire procedure, the FFT-HF in patients was lower than that in controls. Using the WT-HRV, the patients did not differ from the controls at baseline, and only the controls showed a decrease during emotional induction. After the video, the WT-HRV in patients began to decrease during the first 2Â min of emotional recovery although the WT-HRV in controls was already increased. These results highlighted the disturbances in the physiological dynamics of emotion regulation processes in patients with AN-RT.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Neuroscience
Biological Psychiatry
Authors
Delphine Rommel, Jean-Louis Nandrino, Julien De Jonckheere, Marie Swierczek, Vincent Dodin, Régis Logier,