Altered Neural Processing of Interoception in Patients With Functional Neurological Disorder: A Task-Based fMRI Study 2024 Sojka et al

Discussion in 'Other psychosomatic news and research' started by Andy, Nov 20, 2024 at 9:52 AM.

  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

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    Abstract

    Objective:
    Research suggests that disrupted interoception contributes to the development and maintenance of functional neurological disorder (FND); however, no functional neuroimaging studies have examined the processing of interoceptive signals in patients with FND.

    Methods:
    The authors examined univariate and multivariate functional MRI neural responses of 38 patients with mixed FND and 38 healthy control individuals (HCs) during a task exploring goal-directed attention to cardiac interoception-versus-control (exteroception or rest) conditions. The relationships between interoception-related neural responses, heartbeat-counting accuracy, and interoceptive trait prediction error (ITPE) were also investigated for FND patients.

    Results:
    When attention was directed to heartbeat signals versus exteroception or rest tasks, FND patients showed decreased neural activations (and reduced coactivations) in the right anterior insula and bilateral dorsal anterior cingulate cortices (among other areas), compared with HCs. For FND patients, heartbeat-counting accuracy was positively correlated with right anterior insula and ventromedial prefrontal activations during interoception versus rest. Cardiac interoceptive accuracy was also correlated with bilateral dorsal anterior cingulate activations in the interoception-versus-exteroception contrast, and neural activations were correlated with ITPE scores, showing inverse relationships to those observed for heartbeat-counting accuracy.

    Conclusions:
    This study identified state and trait interoceptive disruptions in FND patients. Convergent between- and within-group findings contextualize the pathophysiological role of cingulo-insular (salience network) areas across the spectrum of functional seizures and functional movement disorder. These findings provide a starting point for the future development of comprehensive neurophysiological assessments of interoception for FND patients, features that also warrant research as potential prognostic and monitoring biomarkers.

    Paywall, https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.neuropsych.20240070
     
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  2. Eleanor

    Eleanor Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    A finding of reduced neural activation during interoceptive tasks would seem to conflict with the hypothesis that FND patients are paying too much attention to interoceptive signals and becoming overly sensitised?
     
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  3. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    The "interoception in "functional" diseases" literature is all over the place - people with functional diseases including ME/CFS and fibromyalgia are supposed to be too aware, not aware enough, or authors of studies reluctantly accept that the data don't support the idea.

    From the abstract, this study appears takes things meta. There doesn't seem to be a clear signal of increased or decreased interoception (defined here as heart-beat counting accuracy). But, no matter. The researchers then trawl through patterns of brain activation when patients are directed to pay attention to heartbeats, and relationships between heartbeat counting accuracy and activations of various bits of brain. It smacks of desperation.
     
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  4. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    Just yesterday I said this about another study:
    And here they are, taking 'clutching at straws' to a whole new level.
     
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