| Literature DB >> 34831534 |
Andrea Poli1, Angelo Gemignani2, Federico Soldani3, Mario Miccoli1.
Abstract
Baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) has been proposed as a transdiagnostic biomarker of stress vulnerability across psychopathologies, and a reliable association between PTSD, OCD and lower resting RSA was found. Contemplative practices have been linked to the activation of the vagus as well as to an increased RSA that, according to the polyvagal theory, reflects the activation of the ventral vagal complex (VVC) and may promote PTSD and OCD recovery. PubMed and Scopus databases were selected to conduct a search following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) 2020 guidelines, and A MeaSurement Tool to Assess systematic Reviews-2 (AMSTAR-2) was used to appraise the methodological quality for this systematic review. Six articles met the inclusion criteria (one cross-sectional study, one study with pre-post measurements, two cohort studies and two RCT studies). Mindfulness-related interventions promoted parasympathetic activity, an increased vagal tone and improvements in PTSD and OCD symptoms. According to the polyvagal theory, mindfulness-related and compassion-related meditations would be conceptualized as neural exercises expanding the capacity of the ventral vagal complex to regulate the present state and to promote resilience. Clinical and methodological issues are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: contemplative practices; data analysis methods; mindfulness; polyvagal theory; study designs; traumatic stress
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34831534 PMCID: PMC8619958 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182211778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
PICOS.
| Parameter | Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Population | PTSD and OCD patients. | Underaged (<18 years) and/or older (>65 years) subjects |
| Intervention | Any protocol of mindfulness-related or compassion-related intervention | Slow breathing techniques not related to mindfulness or compassion interventions |
| Comparison | Comparison of mindfulness-related or compassion-related interventions with control groups (other interventions, no intervention) | |
| Outcomes | Physiological parameters associated with cardio-respiratory system or central nervous system (i.e., EEG, fMRI, HRV, RSA, and cardio-respiratory synchronization), measured with a psychological/behavioral variable (investigated through a psychometric quantitative tool) | Physiological parameters that are not relevant for the review, or only a psychological/behavioral parameter alone has been investigated |
| Study design | Within subjects, cross sectional, RCTs, longitudinal, pre-post | A lack of rigor in the description of the methodology (e.g., age, gender, how subjects were recruited, treatments and procedures used that are clearly stated, protocol duration, measured outcomes) and of the experimental set-up (e.g., tools and setups used to measure outcomes), so that replicability is difficult. |
Search strategy of the study.
| Database | Query | Research in | Items Found |
|---|---|---|---|
| PubMed |
“mindfulness” OR “MBSR” OR “compassion” OR “self-compassion” | Title/abstract | 78,556 |
|
“Cardio respiratory coherence” OR “Cardio-respiratory coherence” OR “Cardiorespiratory coherence” OR “Cardiorespiratory coupling” OR “Cardio respiratory coupling” OR “Cardio-respiratory coupling” OR “Cardiorespiratory interaction” OR “Cardio respiratory interaction” OR “Cardio-respiratory interaction” OR “Cardiorespiratory synchronization” OR “Cardio respiratory synchronization” OR “Cardio-respiratory synchronization” OR “Electroencephalogram” OR “EEG” OR “Functional connectivity” OR “Heart rate variability” OR “HRV” OR “Magnetic resonance imaging” OR “MRI” OR “Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia” OR “RSA” | Title/abstract | 725,931 | |
|
“Post-traumatic stress disorder” OR “PTSD” OR “obsessive-compulsive disorder” OR “OCD” | Title/abstract | 107,609 | |
|
Combine #1 AND #2 AND #3 | 33 | ||
|
Limit to “Humans” | 23 | ||
|
Limit to (English) | 23 | ||
| Scopus |
“mindfulness” OR “MBSR” OR “compassion” OR “self-compassion” | Title/abstract/Keywords | 14,203 |
|
“Cardio respiratory coherence” OR “Cardio-respiratory coherence” OR “Cardiorespiratory coherence ”OR “Cardiorespiratory coupling” OR “Cardio respiratory coupling” OR “Cardio-respiratory coupling” OR “Cardiorespiratory interaction” OR “Cardio respiratory interaction” OR “Cardio-respiratory interaction” OR “Cardiorespiratory synchronization” OR “Cardio respiratory synchronization” OR “Cardio-respiratory synchronization” OR “Electroencephalogram” OR “EEG” OR “Functional connectivity” OR “Heart rate variability” OR “HRV” OR “Magnetic resonance imaging” OR “MRI” OR “Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia” OR “RSA” | Title/Abstract/Keywords | 1,232,687 | |
|
“Post-traumatic stress disorder” OR “PTSD” OR “obsessive-compulsive disorder” OR “OCD” | 20,114 | ||
|
Combine #1 AND #2 AND #3 | 42 | ||
|
Limit to “Humans” | 37 | ||
|
Limit to (English) | 35 |
Figure 1PRISMA 2020 flow chart for literature search and screening results.
Included studies.
| Study | Study Design | Mindfulness- or Compassion-Related Intervention Group | Control Group | Mean Age (Standard Deviation) | Mindfulness- or Compassion-Related Intervention | Mindfulness- or Compassion-Related Intervention Details | Comparison Intervention(s) | Comparison Intervention(s) Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simon et al., 2014 | Cross-sectional | 21 unmedicated OCD patients (13 females) | 21 healthy controls (13 females) | 33.1 (10.8) | Distracting bar orientation task | Self-referential evaluation task | ||
| Bhatnagar et al., 2013 | Cohort | 8 PTSD patients (1 female) | No control group | 59.5 | MBSR | 8 weeks | No comparison intervention | |
| Kang et al., 2018 | Cohort | 29 PTSD patients (6 females) | No control group | 59.0 (12.8) | Transcendental Meditation (TM) | 8 weeks | No comparison intervention | |
| King et al., 2016 | Pre-Post | 14 PTSD patients (0 females) | 9 PTSD patients (0 females) | 32.43 (7.54) | Mindfulness-Based Exposure Therapy (MBET) | 16 weeks | Present-Centered Group Therapy (PCGT) | 16 weeks |
| Williams et al., 2020 | RCT | 80 PTSD patients (females n° not reported) | 2 groups of 80 PTSD patients (females n° not reported) | Not reported | Mindfulness Meditation (MM) | 8 weeks | Hypnosis, Education condition | 8 weeks |
| Wahbeh et al., 2016 | RCT | 27 PTSD patients (2 females) | 3 groups of 25 PTSD patients (4 females) | 53.3 (12.6) | Mindfulness Meditation (MM) | 6 weeks | MM and Slow breathing (SB), SB, Sitting quietly (SQ) | 6 weeks |
Outcomes.
| Study | Cardio-Respiratory System | Central Nervous System | Psychological/Behavioral Outcome | Statistical Analyses | Power Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simon et al., 2014 | Not investigated | Dampening of BOLD amygdala hyperactivity | Only OCD-related and aversive stimuli were rated less unpleasant during distraction | Repeated measures ANOVA with a Greenhouse–Geisser correction when sphericity was violated | Not reported |
| Bhatnagar et al., 2013 | Increased pNN50 measure of HRV | Not investigated | PTSD symptoms had | Not reported | Not reported |
| Kang et al., 2018 | Not investigated | Increased low-frequency bands (1–7 Hz) of EEG spectral power at post-treatment and follow-up and only during meditation states | Reductions in PTSD symptoms, experiential avoidance, and depressive and somatic symptoms, as well as increases in measures of mindfulness and quality of life | Repeated measures ANOVA with a Hyunh-Feldt correction when sphericity was violated | Not reported |
| King et al., 2016 | Not investigated | Increased DMN rsFC with DLPFC and dorsal ACC regions following MBET | Reduction in PTSD symptoms; PCC-DLPFC correlated with improvement in PTSD avoidant and hyperarousal symptoms | Paired-sample t-test comparisons | Not reported |
| Williams et al., 2020 | Not investigated | EEG pre- and post- treatment (protocol only) | Mindfulness, Self-compassion, Pain catastrophizing and Pain acceptance measures (protocol only) | ANOVA (protocol only) | N = 240 to have at least 80% power, even at the largest standard deviation when using ANOVA |
| Wahbeh et al., 2016 | No change in HR and HRV within and between groups | Lower awakening cortisol within MM group | Subjective hyperarousal symptoms improvement within-group (but not between groups) for MM, MM+SB, and SQ; Intrusive thoughts decreased in MM compared with MM + SB and SB | Paired t-test; ANCOVA | N = 25 in each group, for the main effects of ANCOVA the adjusted effect size (f) is 0.46, which yields power of >0.99 |