| Literature DB >> 29624596 |
Endika Martínez1, Zigor Aira1, Itsaso Buesa1, Ibane Aizpurua1, Diego Rada2, Jon Jatsu Azkue1.
Abstract
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a highly prevalent, chronic musculoskeletal condition characterized by widespread pain and evoked pain at tender points. This study evaluated various aspects of body awareness in a sample of 14 women with FMS and 13 healthy controls, such as plasticity of the body schema, body esteem, and interoceptive awareness. To this end, the Rubber Hand Illusion (RHI), the Body Esteem Scale (BES), and the Body Perception Questionnaire (BPQ) were used, respectively. Consistent with increased plasticity of the body schema, FMS patients scored higher, with large or very large effect sizes, across all three domains evaluated in the RHI paradigm, namely proprioceptive drift and perceived ownership and motor control over the rubber hand. Scores on all items addressed by the BES were consistently lower among FMS subjects (2.52, SEM .19 vs 3.89, SEM .16, respectively, p < .01, Cohen's d = .38-.66). In the FMS sample, BES scores assigned to most painful regions also were lower than those assigned to the remaining body sites (1.58, SEM .19 vs 2.87, SEM .18, respectively, p < .01). Significantly higher scores (p < .01, Cohen's d = .51-.87) were found in the FMS sample across awareness (3.57 SEM .15 vs 1.87 SEM .11), stress response (3.76 SEM .11 vs 1.78 SEM .11), autonomic nervous system reactivity (2.59 SEM .17 vs 1.35 SEM .07), and stress style 2 (2.73 SEM .27 vs 1.13 SEM .04) subscales of the BPQ. Intensity of ongoing clinical pain was found to be strongly correlated with interoceptive awareness (r = .75, p = .002). The results suggest a disturbed embodiment in FMS, characterized by instability of the body schema, negatively biased cognitions regarding one's own body, and increased vigilance to internal bodily cues. These manifestations may be interpreted as related with the inability of incoming sensory inputs to adequately update negatively biased off-line somatorepresentations stored as long-term memory.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29624596 PMCID: PMC5889164 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0194534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Experimental setting for inducing the rubber hand illusion.
The subject was sitting at a table with eyes fixed on the rubber hand and her actual right hand placed inside an opaque box. The positions of the chair and the box both were adjusted so that the subject had the fake hand, but not the real one in sight. Small paint-brushes were used to synchronously stroke both the rubber hand and the subject’s hidden hand.
Ongoing pain and clinical status in the two study groups.
| FMS | Healthy Controls | |
|---|---|---|
| Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) | 88.38 (2.72) | – |
| Brief Pain Inventory–Short Form | 7.39 (.37) | .16 (.09) |
| Pain intensity (Visual Analog Scale) | 8.89 (.28) | .15 (.12) |
| SF12 –Physical Component Summary | 23.10 (.82) | 53.68 (1.23) |
| SF12 –Mental Component Summary | 33.27 (1.98) | 54.08 (2.09) |
Subjects in the FMS sample had lower health indicators in terms of physical and mental summary scales of the 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12), and exhibited significantly higher levels of clinical pain intensity on the VAS. The Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) was administered only to FMS subjects. Data are presented as mean (SEM).
** p < .01 on the Student’s t test for independent samples.
Assessment of the RHI in fibromyalgia and healthy controls.
| FMS | Healthy controls | Effect size | |
|---|---|---|---|
| It seemed like the rubber hand was where my own hand was | 4.07 (.22) * | 3.08 (.38) | .88 (.07–1.68) |
| I felt as if my own hand was drifting towards the rubber hand | 3.14 (.25) ** | 1.38 (.24) | 1.95 (1.01–2.88) |
| It seemed as if the touch I was feeling came from somewhere between my own hand and the rubber hand | 3.07 (.32) ** | 1.38 (.24) | 1.61 (.73–2.50) |
| It seemed (visually) as if the rubber hand was drifting towards my own hand | 3.21 (.28) ** | 1.23 (.12) | 2.46 (1.44–3.48) |
| It seemed as if the rubber hand and my own hand were approaching | 3.50 (.25) ** | 1.23 (.21) | 3.10 (1.96–4.24) |
| It seemed like the rubber hand belonged to me | 3.92 (.26) | 3.15 (.37) | .60 (-.18–1.38) |
| It seemed like the rubber hand began to resemble my real hand | 3.50 (.32) | 2.76 (.37) | .57 (-.21–1.35) |
| It seemed like I was looking directly at my own hand, rather than at a rubber hand | 4.07 (.28) | 3.46 (.41) | .46 (-.31–1.24) |
| It seemed like the rubber hand was part of my body | 4.07 (.26) | 3.15 (.37) | .78 (-.01–1.58) |
| It seemed like the rubber hand was my hand | 3.85 (.27) | 3.15 (.38) | .57 (-.21–1.35) |
| The rubber hand began to resemble my own hand in terms of shape, skin tone, freckles or some other visual features | 3.50 (.27) | 2.53 (.44) | .72 (-.07–1.51) |
| It seemed as if I was feeling the touch of the paintbrush in the location where I saw the rubber hand touched | 4.21 (.21) | 3.15 (.50) | .75 (-.03–1.55) |
| It seemed like I was unable to move my own hand | 3.92 (.24) ** | 1.53 (.31) | 2.34 (1.34–3.34) |
| It seemed like I could not really tell where my hand was | 3.50 (.22) ** | 1.69 (.32) | 1.76 (.85–2.66) |
| It seemed like my own hand had disappeared | 3.78 (.26) ** | 2.00 (.39) | 1.47 (.60–2.33) |
| It seemed like my own hand was out of my control | 3.57 (.22) ** | 1.54 (.27) | 2.24 (1.26–3.23) |
| It seemed like I could move the rubber hand if I would like | 3.21 (.33) | 2.38 (.43) | .58 (-.19–1.37) |
| It seemed like I was in control of the rubber hand | 3.28 (.33) | 2.38 (.43) | .63 (-.15–1.42) |
FMS patients scored generally higher relative to healthy controls across all items in all three domains of the questionnaire. Data from 5-point Likert scales (1 –totally disagree, 5- totally agree) are presented as means (SEM; * p < .05, ** p < .01 on the Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon U-test). Effect size is provided as Cohen’s d (95% CI).
Scores from FMS patients and healthy controls on the Body Esteem Scale.
| FMS | Healthy Controls | Effect size | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Body scent | 3.21 (.23) | 3.69 (.39) | .38 (-1.18-.3) |
| Appetite | 3.64 (.17) * | 4.38 (.28) | .39 (-.04–1.54) |
| Nose | 3.42 (.29) | 3.61 (.24) | .38 (-.58-.96) |
| Physical stamina | 1.92 (.30) ** | 3.92 (.30) | .45 (.85–2.67) |
| Reflexes | 2.85 (.39) ** | 4.50 (.15) | .44 (.60–2.38) |
| Lips | 3.43 (.31) * | 4.31 (.21) | .40 (.09–1.70) |
| Muscular strength | 1.71 (.30) ** | 4.23 (.20) | .52 (1.58–3.68) |
| Waist | 2.21 (.24) ** | 3.61 (.31) | .42 (.52–2.24) |
| Energy level | 1.50 (.17) ** | 4.23 (.20) | .66 (2.63–5.29) |
| Thighs | 2.36 (.34) ** | 3.69 (.26) | .41 (.35–2.02) |
| Ears | 3.29 (.27) * | 4.15 (.22) | .47 (1.11–3.02) |
| Biceps | 2.38 (.24) ** | 3.77 (.28) | .44 (.58–2.35) |
| Chin | 3.07 (.22) ** | 4.08 (.21) | .42 (.42–2.10) |
| Body build | 2.42 (.32) ** | 4.30 (.17) | .46 (.99–2.86) |
| Physical coordination | 2.50 (.32) ** | 4.53 (.14) | .48 (1.19–3.13) |
| Buttocks | 2.62 (.35) * | 3.85 (.27) | .42 (.24–1.92) |
| Agility | 1.85 (.29) ** | 4.38 (.21) | .52 (1.60–3.72) |
| Width of shoulders | 2.93 (.32) * | 4.08 (.26) | .41 (.23–1.87) |
| Arms | 2.86 (.25) | 3.54 (.29) | .39 (-.11–1.47) |
| Chest or breasts | 2.50 (.27) ** | 3.77 (.23) | .42 (.50–2.21) |
| Appearance of eyes | 3.00 (.31) * | 3.92 (.23) | .40 (.08–1.70) |
| Cheeks /cheekbones | 3.29 (.24) | 3.84 (.25) | .39 (-.16–1.40) |
| Hips | 2.29 (.29) ** | 3.77 (.20) | .44 (.73–2.51) |
| Legs | 2.14 (.27) ** | 3.69 (.26) | .43 (.56–2.29) |
| Figure or physique | 2.84 (.27) ** | 3.84 (.24) | .45 (.85–2.67) |
| Sex drive | 2.42 (.37) ** | 3.92 (.21) | .42 (.47–2.18) |
| Feet | 2.62 (.33) | 3.54 (.31) | .40 (-.04–1.58) |
| Sex organs | 2.84 (.27) * | 3.84 (.24) | .41 (.22–1.89) |
| Appearance of stomach | 2.14 (.31) * | 3.31 (.29) | .41 (.23–1.88) |
| Health | 1.42 (.13) ** | 4.53 (.18) | .81 (3.63–6.88) |
| Sex activities | 2.14 (.43) ** | 3.76 (.28) | .41 (.37–2.04) |
| Body hair | 2.50 (.34) | 3.23 (.36) | .39 (-.22–1.34) |
| Physical condition | 1.50 (.22) ** | 4.15 (.24) | .56 (1.89–4.15) |
| Face | 3.00 (.26) ** | 4.08 (.18) | .42 (.46–2.16) |
| Weight | 2.21 (.35) * | 3.38 (.31) | .40 (.14–1.77) |
| General BES score | 2.52 (.17) ** | 3.89 (.16) | .48 (1.23–3.18) |
FMS patients assigned lower scores to all evaluated body features, relative to healthy controls. Differences were statistically significant across most items of the questionnaire, as well as in the general BES score (* p < .05, **p < .01 on the Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon U-test). Data are presented as mean (SEM), and Cohen’s d (95% CI) is provided as a measure of effect size.
Scores from FMS subjects and healthy controls on the Body Perception Questionnaire.
| Domains | FMS | Healthy Controls | Effect size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness | 3.57 (.15) ** | 1.87 (.11) | .61 (2.28–4.73) |
| Stress response | 3.76 (.11) ** | 1.78 (.11) | .87 (3.89–7.40) |
| 2.59 (.17) ** | 1.35 (.07) | .51 (1.49–3.56) | |
| Stress style 1 | 3.25 (.20) | 2.55 (.38) | .40 (-.02–1.60) |
| Stress style 2 | 2.73 (.27) ** | 1.13 (.04) | .68 (2.76–5.49) |
Scores from FMS patients were higher across all subscales, with large effect sizes and statistically different differences on most subscales (** p < .01 on the Student’s t-test for independent samples). Effect size is provided as Cohen’s d (95% confidence interval).