| Literature DB >> 31950532 |
Nadja F Bednarczuk1,2,3, Jacob M Bradshaw1, Shan Y Mian1, Efstratia Papoutselou1, Sami Mahmoud1, Keunhwi Ahn2, Ilya Chudenkov1, Constanza Fuentealba4, Shahvaiz Hussain1, Patricia Castro1, Adolfo M Bronstein1, Diego Kaski5,6, Qadeer Arshad1,2.
Abstract
Spatial orientation is achieved by integrating visual, vestibular and proprioceptive cues. Individuals that rely strongly upon visual cues to facilitate spatial orientation are termed visually dependent. Heightened visual reliance commonly occurs in patients following vestibular dysfunction and can influence clinical outcome. Additionally, psychological factors, including anxiety, are associated with poorer clinical outcome following vestibular dysfunction. Given that visual dependency measures are affected by psychological and contextual influences, such as time pressure, we investigated the interaction between time pressure and anxiety upon visual dependency in healthy controls and vestibular migraine patients. Visual dependency was assessed using a "Rod and Disk" task at baseline and under time pressure (3 s to complete the task). Non-situational (trait) and situational (state) anxiety levels were quantified using the Spielberg State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. We calculated the change in visual dependency (VD) [∆VD = VDtime pressure - VDbaseline ] and correlated it with participants' trait anxiety scores. We observed a significant negative correlation between trait anxiety and the change in VD (R2 = .393, p < .001) in healthy controls and a positive correlation in dizzy patients (R2 = .317, p < .001). That is, healthy individuals that were more anxious became less visually dependent under time pressure (i.e., more accurate), whereas less anxious individuals became more visually dependent. The reverse was observed in vestibular migraine patients. Our results illustrate that anxiety can differentially modulate task performance during spatial orientation judgements under time pressure in healthy individuals and dizzy patients. These findings have potential implications for individualised patient rehabilitation therapies.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; decision-making; spatial orientation; time pressure; vestibular migraine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31950532 DOI: 10.1111/ejn.14680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Neurosci ISSN: 0953-816X Impact factor: 3.386