| Literature DB >> 26194270 |
Henriët van Middendorp1, Matthijs Kox2,3, Peter Pickkers2, Andrea W M Evers4.
Abstract
Expectancies play a major role for the treatment outcome of a broad variety of immune-mediated conditions and may strengthen or mimic the effects of regular long-term therapies. This study adds to a recently published study of Kox et al. (PNAS 111:7379-7384, 2014) on the ability to voluntarily influence the physiological stress response in healthy men after a training program consisting of meditation, breathing techniques, and exposure to cold, which found highly promising results on the clinical, autonomic, and immune response to experimentally induced inflammation (using the experimental human endotoxemia model). Within this project, a number of variables were included to assess the role of generalized (optimism, neuroticism) and specific outcome expectancies (related to the effects of the training on health) on the response to endotoxin administration after training. Indications were found that especially the generalized outcome expectancy optimism is a potential determinant of the autonomic (epinephrine: rho = 0.76, p < .01) and immune response (interleukin-10: rho = 0.60, p < .05) to induced inflammation after training, whereas more specific expectations with regard to the effects of the training could be especially relevant for the clinical symptom report (flu-like symptoms: rho = -0.71, p < .01). This proof-of-principle study provides first indications for potential innovative treatments to change immune-modulating responses by means of psychological mechanisms. If replicated, these findings may be used for predicting training responses and potentiate their effects by means of optimism-inducing interventions in patients with immune-mediated rheumatic conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Cytokines; Expectancies; Inflammation; Optimism; Proof-of-principle study; Psychology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26194270 PMCID: PMC4819555 DOI: 10.1007/s10067-015-3009-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rheumatol ISSN: 0770-3198 Impact factor: 2.980
Spearman’s rank correlations of generalized and specific outcome expectancies with the clinical, autonomic, and immune response elicited by endotoxin administration after the training program in healthy young men (n = 12)
| Response to endotoxin administration | Clinical | Autonomic | Immune | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcome expectancies | Flu-like symptoms (T90) | Epinephrine (T0) | IL-10 (T60) | TNF-α (T90) | IL-6 (T120) | IL-8 (T120) |
| Generalized outcome expectancies | ||||||
| Optimism (LOT-R) | −.38 | .76** | .60* | −.32 | −.26 | −.32 |
| Neuroticism (BFI) | .10 | −.32 | −.09 | .27 | .22 | .11 |
| Specific outcome expectancies | −.71** | .28 | .33 | .00 | .16 | −.15 |
IL interleukin, TNF tumor necrosis factor, LOT-R Life Orientation Test-Revised, BFI Big Five Inventory
*p < .05; **p < .01