| Literature DB >> 31174264 |
Michael Eggart1,2, Andreas Lange3, Martin J Binser4, Silvia Queri5, Bruno Müller-Oerlinghausen6,7,8.
Abstract
Interoception is the sense of the physiological condition of the entire body. Impaired interoception has been associated with aberrant activity of the insula in major depressive disorder (MDD) during heartbeat perception tasks. Despite clinical relevance, studies investigating interoceptive impairments in MDD have never been reviewed systematically according to the guidelines of the PRISMA protocol, and therefore we collated studies that assessed accuracy in detecting heartbeat sensations (interoceptive accuracy, IAc) in MDD (databases: PubMed/Medline, PsycINFO, and PsycARTICLES). Out of 389 records, six studies met the inclusion criteria. The main findings suggest that (i) moderately depressed samples exhibit the largest interoceptive deficits as compared with healthy adults. (ii) difficulties in decision making and low affect intensity are correlated with low IAc, and (iii) IAc seems to normalize in severely depressed subjects. These associations may be confounded by sex, anxiety or panic disorder, and intake of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Our findings have implications for the development of interoceptive treatments that might relieve MDD-related symptoms or prevent relapse in recurrent depression by targeting the interoceptive nervous system.Entities:
Keywords: heartbeat perception; interoception; major depressive disorder; somatic signals
Year: 2019 PMID: 31174264 PMCID: PMC6627769 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci9060131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart of study selection process.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Study | Diagnostic Criteria | Participants and Comparison Groups ( | Exclusion Criteria | Heartbeat Perception Task (Number of Trials) | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ehlers and Breuer (1992) [ | DSM-III-R | MDD or dysthymia (combined | Pregnancy, endocrine or cardiovascular disorder, cardiac medication | HMTT (3 trials) | Depressed subjects exhibited significantly higher error for heartbeat perception (43.00%) than subjects with panic (23.00%) or generalized anxiety disorder (21.00%). Group differences remained significant after controlling for medication status. |
| van der Does et al. (1997) [ | DSM-IV | MDD or dysthymia (combined | Lifetime history of psychosis or substance abuse, comorbidity of panic disorder | HMTT (3 trials) | No significant IAc difference between individuals with mood disorder (42.70%), panic disorder (30.30%), and healthy controls (37.10%). However, a significant lower proportion of accurate heartbeat perceivers was found in the mood disorder group (0.00%) as compared with subjects with panic disorder (30.40%), but no significant differences with regard to healthy controls (9.50%). |
| Mussgay et al. (1999) [ | ICD-9 | Neurotic depression ( | No exclusion criteria (observational study that recruited all inpatients in the sequence of their admission) | HMTT (3 trials) | The groups significantly differed regarding performance in HMTT. There was a post-hoc trend ( |
| Dunn et al. (2007) [ | DSM-IV | MDD in-/outpatients ( | Comorbidity of panic disorder, no history of brain injury, psychosis, learning disability or substance abuse | HMTT (6 trials) | The moderately depressed community sample exhibited lower heartbeat perception accuracy (39.60%) than healthy controls (29.00%). No significant difference in IAc between subjects with MDD (25.31%) and healthy controls. |
| Terhaar et al. (2012) [ | DSM-IV | MDD ( | Comorbidity of panic disorder | HMTT (3 trials) | Participants with MDD exhibited significantly lower IAc (0.67) than healthy controls (0.81, large effect, Cohen’s |
| Furman et al. (2013) [ | DSM-IV-TR | MDD without anxiety disorder ( | Psychosis, substance abuse or impaired mental status, cardiovascular symptoms | HMTT (3 trials) | IAc was significantly lower in subjects with MDD (0.55) than in healthy controls (0.65). Depression severity and IAc were uncorrelated in MDD as well as in healthy controls. |
DSM-III-R = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, third edition, revised; DSM-IV(-TR) = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition (text revision); HMTT = Assessment of IAc with Schandry’s heartbeat mental tracking task (Schandry, 1981); IAc = Interoceptive Accuracy; ICD-9 = International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ninth revision; MDD = major depressive disorder; N = sample size; NA = data not available; M ± SD = mean and standard deviation. To establish accordance with APA style requiring that statistics should be rounded to two decimal places, we added a zero to statistics if cited authors reported results that were rounded to one decimal place.