Literature DB >> 16204443

Imagined risk of suffocation as a trigger for hyperventilation.

Ilse Van Diest1, Steven De Peuter, Stephan Devriese, Elke Wellens, Karel P Van de Woestijne, Omer Van den Bergh.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Although hyperventilation has been hypothesized to play a role in many pathologies, its critical triggers remain poorly understood. The present experiment aimed to test whether stronger hyperventilation responses occur in response to suggested risk of suffocation compared with other fearful situations in high- and low-trait anxious women.
METHODS: Fractional end-tidal CO2-concentration (FetCO2), respiratory frequency, and inspiratory volume were measured nonintrusively in high- (n = 24) and low- (n = 24) trait anxious women during imagery of 3 fear, 1 tension, 1 depressive, and 3 relaxation scripts. The fear scripts were equal in ratings of unpleasantness and arousal but differed regarding the inclusion of suggested risk of suffocation and entrapment. After each imagery trial, participants rated the emotional dimensions of pleasantness, arousal, and dominance and the vividness of their imagery.
RESULTS: Decreases in FetCO2 occurred in all fear scripts. High-trait anxious women showed a stronger reduction in FetCO2 compared with low-trait anxious women during the fear script suggesting risk of suffocation but not during the other fear scripts. This effect was unrelated to any of the self-reported fear ratings. Self-reported fear of entrapment was associated with an overall lower FetCO2 but not with enhanced reactivity to imagined entrapment.
CONCLUSION: High-trait anxiety is associated with stronger respiratory responsivity to imagined risk of suffocation and may constitute a specific vulnerability factor for the development of panic disorder and claustrophobia.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16204443     DOI: 10.1097/01.psy.0000181275.78903.64

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychosom Med        ISSN: 0033-3174            Impact factor:   4.312


  3 in total

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  3 in total

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