Sex Differences Linking Pain-Related Fear and Interoceptive Hypervigilance: Attentional Biases to Conditioned Threat and Safety Signals in a Visceral Pain Model
Although the broad role of fear and hypervigilance in conditions of the gut-brain axis like irritable bowel syndrome is supported by converging evidence, the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Even in healthy individuals, it remains unclear how pain-related fear may contribute to...
Main Authors: | Franziska Labrenz, Sopiko Knuf-Rtveliashvili, Sigrid Elsenbruch |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Frontiers Media S.A.
2020-03-01
|
Series: | Frontiers in Psychiatry |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00197/full |
Similar Items
-
Contingency awareness shapes acquisition and extinction of emotional responses in a conditioning model of pain-related fear
by: Franziska eLabrenz, et al.
Published: (2015-11-01) -
Nocebo effects in visceral pain: concept and design of the experimental randomized-controlled pain study ‘NoVis’
by: Jana Luisa Aulenkamp, et al.
Published: (2023-10-01) -
Does pain hypervigilance further impact the lack of habituation to pain in individuals with chronic pain? A cross-sectional pain ERP study
by: Vossen CJ, et al.
Published: (2018-02-01) -
When gut feelings teach the brain to fear pain: Context-dependent activation of the central fear network in a novel interoceptive conditioning paradigm
by: Adriane Icenhour, et al.
Published: (2021-09-01) -
Associations of Pain Vigilance and Past and Current Pain with Kinesiophobia after Sport Injury in Current and Former Athletes from Iran and the United States
by: Fahimeh Badiei, et al.
Published: (2023-08-01)