Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
920891 Biological Psychology 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Patients with somatoform disorders received a heartbeat perception training.•There were no overall differences between the training and a waiting control group.•The training increased interoceptive accuracy in somatoform patients with low health anxiety.•Reductions in symptom reports were observed after the interoceptive training.•The study suggests a link between low interoceptive accuracy and somatoform disorders.

Distortions in interoceptive accuracy have been linked to somatoform disorders. In line with cognitive theories of symptom formation in somatoform disorders, decreases in interoceptive accuracy have recently been observed to co-occur with more severe symptom reports. The current study tested the hypothesis that experimentally increasing interoceptive accuracy should decrease symptom severity in somatoform disorders. Twenty-nine patients with somatoform disorders were instructed in a newly developed heartbeat perception training procedure. Heartbeat perception, as a proxy for interoceptive accuracy, was assessed with a mental tracking task. Although there were no significant differences between the training group and a waiting control group (n = 23) regarding increases in heartbeat perception, health anxiety served as a moderator and significant reductions in state symptom reports were observed after training. These findings suggest a relation between lower interoceptive accuracy and the perception of bodily symptoms in somatoform disorders.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , , ,