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Symptom provocation in dental anxiety using cross‐phobic video stimulation
Author(s) -
Lueken Ulrike,
Hoyer Jürgen,
Siegert Jens,
Gloster Andrew T.,
Wittchen HansUlrich
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
european journal of oral sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.802
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1600-0722
pISSN - 0909-8836
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0722.2010.00790.x
Subject(s) - anxiety , psychology , audiology , stimulation , stimulus (psychology) , clinical psychology , trait anxiety , skin conductance , phobic disorder , provocation test , dentistry , medicine , psychiatry , neuroscience , psychotherapist , alternative medicine , pathology , biomedical engineering
Lueken U, Hoyer J, Siegert J, Gloster AT, Wittchen H‐U. Symptom provocation in dental anxiety using cross‐phobic video stimulation.
Eur J Oral Sci 2011; 119: 61–68. © 2011 Eur J Oral Sci Although video stimulation has been successfully employed in dental phobia, conclusions regarding the specificity of reactions are limited. A novel, video‐based paradigm using cross‐phobic video stimulation was validated based on subjective and autonomic responses. Forty subjects were stratified according to dental anxiety as measured by the Dental Fear Survey (DFS) using a median‐split procedure (high‐DFS and low‐DFS groups). Anxiety stimuli comprised dental‐anxiety scenes and non‐dental‐anxiety control scenes (snake stimuli). Neutral scenes were tailored to each anxiety stimulus. Dental, but not snake, stimuli were rated as more anxiety provoking only in the high‐DFS group. Elevated skin‐conductance amplitudes were observed in the high‐DFS group for dental anxiety vs. neutral videos, but not for snake anxiety vs. neutral videos. State and trait anxiety and autonomic reactivity were correlated according to expectations. Using cross‐phobic video stimulation, it was demonstrated that phobogenic reactions in dental anxiety are specific to the respective stimulus material and do not generalize to other non‐dental‐anxiety control conditions. The validation of the paradigm may support and stimulate future research on the characterization of dental anxiety on different response systems, including its underlying neural substrates.

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