Learned Fear of Gastrointestinal Sensations in Healthy Adults.

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Learned Fear of Gastrointestinal Sensations in Healthy Adults.

Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2016 May 4;

Authors: Ceunen E, Zaman J, Weltens N, Sarafanova E, Arijs V, Vlaeyen JW, Van Oudenhove L, Van Diest I

Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Gastrointestinal symptom-specific fear and anxiety are important determinants of gastrointestinal symptom perception. We studied learning of fear toward innocuous gastrointestinal sensations as a putative mechanism in the development of gastrointestinal symptom-specific fear and anxiety.
METHODS: Fifty-two healthy subjects (26 women) received 2 types of esophageal balloon distention at a perceptible but non-painful intensity (conditioned stimulus [CS], the innocuous sensation) and at a painful intensity (unconditioned stimulus [US]). Subjects were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 groups. During the learning phase, the innocuous CS preceded the painful US in the experimental group (n=26). In the control group (n=26), on the contrary, the US never followed the CS directly. During a subsequent extinction phase, both groups received only CS distention-the painful US was no longer administered. Indexes of fear learning towards the innocuous CS distention included the skin conductance response, fear-potentiated startle (measured by the eye blink electromyogram), and self-reported expectancy of the US.
RESULTS: During the learning phase, only the experimental group learned to fear the innocuous gastrointestinal CS, based on the increase in US expectancy (compared to the control group, P=.04), increased skin conductance response (compared to the control group, P=.03), and potentiated startle reflex (compared to the control group, P=.001) in response to the CS. The differences between experimental and control groups in US expectancy and skin conductance, but not fear-potentiated startle, disappeared during the extinction phase.
CONCLUSIONS: Fear towards innocuous gastrointestinal sensations can be established through associative learning in healthy humans. This may be an important mechanism in the development of fear of gastrointestinal symptoms, implicated in the pathophysiology of functional gastrointestinal disorders.

PMID: 27155550 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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