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Neuroimaging and psychophysiological investigation of the link between anxiety, enhanced affective reactivity and interoception in people with joint hypermobility

Núria Mallorquí-Bagué, Sarah N Garfinkel, Miriam Engels, Jessica A Eccles, Guillem Pailhez, Antonio Bulbena, Hugo D Critchley
Key takeaways
  1. 01Joint hypermobility is associated with higher anxiety levels
  2. 02Sensitivity to internal body signals helps explain this link
  3. 03Hypermobile brains react more strongly to emotional scenes
  4. 04Physical makeup can influence vulnerability to anxiety

People with joint hypermobility may experience more anxiety, partly due to a heightened sensitivity to their own internal bodily signals.

Abstract

Objective: Anxiety is associated with increased physiological reactivity and also increased "interoceptive" sensitivity to such changes in internal bodily arousal. Joint hypermobility, an expression of a common variation in the connective tissue protein collagen, is increasingly recognized as a risk factor to anxiety and related disorders. This study explored the link between anxiety, interoceptive sensitivity and hypermobility in a sub-clinical population using neuroimaging and psychophysiological evaluation. Methods: Thirty-six healthy volunteers undertook interoceptive sensitivity tests, a clinical examination for hypermobility and completed validated questionnaire measures of state anxiety and body awareness tendency. Nineteen participants also performed an emotional processing paradigm during functional neuroimaging. Results: We confirmed a significant relationship between state anxiety score and joint hypermobility. Interoceptive sensitivity mediated the relationship between state anxiety and hypermobility. Hypermobile, compared to non-hypermobile, participants displayed heightened neural reactivity to sad and angry scenes within brain regions implicated in anxious feeling states, notably insular cortex. Conclusions: Our findings highlight the dependence of anxiety state on bodily context, and increase our understanding of the mechanisms through which vulnerability to anxiety disorders arises in people bearing a common variant of collagen.

Cite this study
APA
Núria Mallorquí-Bagué, Sarah N Garfinkel, Miriam Engels, Jessica A Eccles, Guillem Pailhez, Antonio Bulbena, & Hugo D Critchley (2014). Neuroimaging and psychophysiological investigation of the link between anxiety, enhanced affective reactivity and interoception in people with joint hypermobility. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/neuroimaging-and-psychophysiological-investigation-of-the-link-between-anxiety-enhanced-affective-reactivity-and-interoception-in-people-with-joint-hypermobility/
MLA
Núria Mallorquí-Bagué, et al. "Neuroimaging and psychophysiological investigation of the link between anxiety, enhanced affective reactivity and interoception in people with joint hypermobility." 2014, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/neuroimaging-and-psychophysiological-investigation-of-the-link-between-anxiety-enhanced-affective-reactivity-and-interoception-in-people-with-joint-hypermobility/.
Chicago
Núria Mallorquí-Bagué et al. 2014. "Neuroimaging and psychophysiological investigation of the link between anxiety, enhanced affective reactivity and interoception in people with joint hypermobility.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/neuroimaging-and-psychophysiological-investigation-of-the-link-between-anxiety-enhanced-affective-reactivity-and-interoception-in-people-with-joint-hypermobility/