OBJECTIVE:Anxiety at the time of gastrointestinal injury or inflammation increases the risk of developing visceral hyperalgesia. Distal esophageal acidification induces hyperalgesia in the non-acid exposed proximal esophagus, due to the sensitization of spinal dorsal horn neurones. The objective was to determine whether anxiety influences acid-induced hyperalgesia. METHODS: A total of 19 healthy volunteers (n = 12 females; age, 22-57 years; mean, 35.7 years) completed a 10-minute mood induction paradigm (anxiety or neutral) with autonomic monitoring (visit 1). On visits 2 and 3, pain thresholds to electrical stimulation, in milliamperes (mA), were determined in the proximal esophagus and foot (control) before and after a 30-minute infusion of 0.15 M of hydrochloric acid. During esophageal acid infusion, the subjects randomly received anxiety or neutral mood induction with autonomic monitoring, in a crossover design. Anxiety and pain ratings were recorded pre and post infusion. RESULTS: Visit 1: Anxiety induction increased anxiety scores (p < .001), mean arterial pressure (p < .001), and cardiac sympathetic index (p = .007), and reduced parasympathetic measures (cardiac vagal tone [p = .05] and cardiac sensitivity to baroreflex [p = .006)]). Visit 2: Anxiety induction conferred greater acid-induced hyperalgesia compared with neutral (-4.9 mA versus 2.7 mA, p = .009, analysis of covariance). No differences in autonomic measures were found during acid infusion with anxiety or neutral mood induction. CONCLUSIONS:Anxiety induction increases acid-induced esophageal hyperalgesia; anxiety, thus, facilitates central sensitization in the esophagus. Our studies provide a new model for studying the effects of anxiety on esophageal hyperalgesia and may allow testing of therapeutic strategies to reduce this effect.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE:Anxiety at the time of gastrointestinal injury or inflammation increases the risk of developing visceral hyperalgesia. Distal esophageal acidification induces hyperalgesia in the non-acid exposed proximal esophagus, due to the sensitization of spinal dorsal horn neurones. The objective was to determine whether anxiety influences acid-induced hyperalgesia. METHODS: A total of 19 healthy volunteers (n = 12 females; age, 22-57 years; mean, 35.7 years) completed a 10-minute mood induction paradigm (anxiety or neutral) with autonomic monitoring (visit 1). On visits 2 and 3, pain thresholds to electrical stimulation, in milliamperes (mA), were determined in the proximal esophagus and foot (control) before and after a 30-minute infusion of 0.15 M of hydrochloric acid. During esophageal acid infusion, the subjects randomly received anxiety or neutral mood induction with autonomic monitoring, in a crossover design. Anxiety and pain ratings were recorded pre and post infusion. RESULTS: Visit 1: Anxiety induction increased anxiety scores (p < .001), mean arterial pressure (p < .001), and cardiac sympathetic index (p = .007), and reduced parasympathetic measures (cardiac vagal tone [p = .05] and cardiac sensitivity to baroreflex [p = .006)]). Visit 2: Anxiety induction conferred greater acid-induced hyperalgesia compared with neutral (-4.9 mA versus 2.7 mA, p = .009, analysis of covariance). No differences in autonomic measures were found during acid infusion with anxiety or neutral mood induction. CONCLUSIONS:Anxiety induction increases acid-induced esophageal hyperalgesia; anxiety, thus, facilitates central sensitization in the esophagus. Our studies provide a new model for studying the effects of anxiety on esophageal hyperalgesia and may allow testing of therapeutic strategies to reduce this effect.
Authors: Sara W Rippel; Sari Acra; Hernán Correa; Michael Vaezi; Carlo Di Lorenzo; Lynn S Walker Journal: Gastroenterology Date: 2012-01-05 Impact factor: 22.682
Authors: T H Taft; M Riehl; J B Sodikoff; P J Kahrilas; L Keefer; B Doerfler; J E Pandolfino Journal: Neurogastroenterol Motil Date: 2016-07-05 Impact factor: 3.598
Authors: Matthias Vogel; Marius Binneböse; Christoph H Lohmann; Florian Junne; Alexander Berth; Christian Riediger Journal: J Clin Med Date: 2022-02-18 Impact factor: 4.241
Authors: Adam D Farmer; Steven J Coen; Michiko Kano; Nathalie Weltens; Huynh Giao Ly; Claude Botha; Peter A Paine; Lukas Van Oudenhove; Qasim Aziz Journal: Ann Gastroenterol Date: 2014
Authors: Farhad Islami; Akram Pourshams; Siavosh Nasseri-Moghaddam; Hooman Khademi; Hossein Poutschi; Masoud Khoshnia; Alireza Norouzi; Taghi Amiriani; Amir Ali Sohrabpour; Ali Aliasgari; Elham Jafari; Shahryar Semnani; Christian C Abnet; Paul D Pharaoh; Paul Brennan; Farin Kamangar; Sanford M Dawsey; Paolo Boffetta; Reza Malekzadeh Journal: Middle East J Dig Dis Date: 2014-04
Authors: Vincent Cibert-Goton; Ching Lam; Melanie Lingaya; Yirga Falcone; John N Wood; David C Bulmer; Robin Spiller Journal: Clin Transl Gastroenterol Date: 2021-02-22 Impact factor: 4.488