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Relationships between psychological state, abuse, somatization and visceral pain sensitivity in irritable bowel syndrome
Author(s) -
Grinsvall Cecilia,
Törnblom Hans,
Tack Jan,
Van Oudenhove Lukas,
Simrén Magnus
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
ueg journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.667
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 2050-6414
pISSN - 2050-6406
DOI - 10.1177/2050640617715851
Subject(s) - somatization , irritable bowel syndrome , medicine , anxiety , cohort , anxiety sensitivity , visceral pain , sexual abuse , clinical psychology , depression (economics) , psychiatry , psychosocial , somatization disorder , poison control , injury prevention , nociception , receptor , environmental health , economics , macroeconomics
Background and objective Psychological states may interfere with visceral sensitivity. Here we investigate associations between psychosocial factors and visceral sensitivity in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Methods Two IBS patient cohorts (Cohort 1: n  = 231, Rome II; Cohort 2: n  = 141, Rome III) underwent rectal barostat testing, and completed questionnaires for anxiety, depression, somatization, and abuse. The associations between questionnaire measures and visceral sensitivity parameters were analyzed in three‐step general linear models (step1: demographic and abuse variables; step 2: anxiety and depression; step 3: somatization). Results Cohort 1. Pain threshold was positively associated with age and female gender, and negatively with adult sexual abuse and somatization. Pain referral area was negatively associated with age and positively with somatization and GI‐specific anxiety, the latter effect mediated by somatization. Cohort 2. Pain threshold was positively associated with age and male gender, and negatively with adult sexual abuse. Pain intensity ratings were positively associated with somatization, female gender and depression, the latter effect mediated by somatization. Conclusion Somatization is associated with most visceral sensitivity parameters, and mediates the effect of some psychological factors on visceral sensitivity. It may reflect a psychobiological sensitization process driving symptom generation in IBS. In addition, abuse history was found to independently affect some visceral sensitivity parameters.

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