| Literature DB >> 34697659 |
Marcella Di Cara1, Denise Grezzo1, Rosanna Palmeri1, Viviana Lo Buono2, Emanuele Cartella1, Katia Micchia1, Caterina Formica1, Carmela Rifici1, Edoardo Sessa1, Giangaetano D'Aleo1, Giuseppa Maresca1, Placido Bramanti1, Francesco Corallo1.
Abstract
Multiple sclerosis is a neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative disease causing several psychosocial problems that significantly impairs quality of life. The most common physical and mental symptoms are anxiety, depression, stress, fatigue, and pain. Several studies investigated the effectiveness of non-pharmacological approaches in improving psychological well-being. This review focused on the impact of mindfulness interventions in patients with multiple sclerosis to reduce psychopathological symptoms and improve well-being. We searched on PubMed database and screening references of included studies and review articles for additional citations. From initial 107 studies, only 8 met search criteria. Our studies showed the efficacy of mindfulness treatment with a reduction in depressive symptoms, a better quality of life (both mental and physical), and a decreased level of fatigue. Findings demonstrated that mindfulness is useful for the improvement of psychological symptoms and pain management and this improvement has also been shown to have a positive impact on the quality of life and coping and adaptation strategies. However, according to the poor available clinics evidence, on cannot conclude that mindfulness interventions are superior to other active interventions in the treatment of psychological symptoms of SM.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Depression; Mindfulness; Multiple sclerosis; Pain; Psychotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34697659 PMCID: PMC8724219 DOI: 10.1007/s10072-021-05686-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Sci ISSN: 1590-1874 Impact factor: 3.307
Fig. 1Search and selection of eligible articles
Aims and results for each study
| Authors, published | Aim | Sample ( | Test to evaluate psychological function | Neuropsychological Evaluation | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roos J. Blankespoor et al | Investigate the effectiveness of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) on the stress and cognitive functions of MS patients | 31 mindfulness group | BDI MSQL-54 CIS-F FFMQ SCS | MACFIMS MMQ Rey Auditory Il test Misure di LLT PASAT Letter-number sequencing test | After participating in MBSR, patients experienced less depressive symptoms, improved quality of life, both in the physical and mental domain, and patients were less fatigued, albeit minimal, changes in cognitive functioning were reported with reference to memory |
| Robert Simpson et al | Test the feasibility and probable efficacy of a standard MBSR course for people with MS | 25 mindfulness group 25 control group | Perceived Stress Scale-10EQ-5D-5 L MSQLI Mindful Attention Awareness Scale — MAAS) SCS ELQ | Recruitment, retention, and data collection demonstrate that a RCT of MBSR is feasible for people with MS | |
| Sara Carletto et al | Evaluate the effectiveness of an affective body based on the awareness intervention group by comparing it with a psychoeducational intervention, by means of a randomized controlled clinical trial | 36 mindfulness group 35 psycho-educational group | FSS BDI-II BAI PSS B-IPQ FAMS M.I.N.I.-Plus | The awareness intervention improved the quality of life of the patients and the perception of the disease; these improvements were maintained at the follow-up evaluation | |
| Rachel M. Gilbertson et al | This study examined the feasibility of using mindfulness in motion in people with multiple sclerosis (MS) and the effect of this program on stress, anxiety, depression, fatigue, and quality of life in people with MS | 22 mindfulness group | MHI MFIS FFMQ SF-36 | Mindfulness in motion proved to be a feasible program yielding positive results, supporting the need for research to determine the extent to which the program can improve quality-of-life outcomes for people with MS | |
| Angela Senders et al | The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between pain interference and trait mindfulness in people with MS | 132 mindfulness group | Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) FFMQ | These results suggest a clinically significant association between mindfulness and pain interference in MS and support further exploration of mindfulness-based interventions in the management of MS-related pain | |
| Cristiano Crescentini et al | To evaluate the effects of an 8-week mindfulness-oriented meditation training on the personality profiles, anxiety and depression symptoms, and mindfulness skills of a group of patients with MS | 17 mindfulness group 16 control group | TCI BFI STAI BDI FFMQ | The data support the utility for patients with MS of therapeutic interventions based on mindfulness meditation that may lead to enhanced character and self-maturity | |
| Somayeh Nejati et al | To evaluate effect of group mindfulness-based stress reduction and consciousness yoga program on quality of life and fatigue severity in patients with MS | 12 mindfulness and yoga group 12 control group | SCID-I/CV FSS MSQOL-54 | The results show that the program is effective in reduction of fatigue severity and improving some subscales of quality of life in MS patients | |
| Bentolhoda Kolahkaj et al | To evaluate effect of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) therapy on quality of life in women with multiple sclerosis | 26 mindfulness group 27 control group | SCID-I QOL | In the MBSR group, the mean subscales of QOL had more significant reduction compare to control group. Also the improvement of all subscales of mental and physical QOL continued after 2 months later in follow up stage The findings suggest that MBSR is useful for improving the quality of life in patients with MS |