4.5 Article

Emotions and emotional approach and avoidance strategies in fibromyalgia

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages 159-167

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2007.08.009

Keywords

alexithymia; emotion regulation; emotions; fatigue; fibromyalgia; pain

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Objective: Disturbances in emotional functioning may contribute to psychological and physical symptoms in patients with fibromyalgia. This study examined emotions and emotion-regulation strategies in women with fibromyalgia and in controls, and how these variables relate to symptoms of fibromyalgia. Methods: We compared 403 women with fibromyalgia to 196 control women using self-report questionnaires. Results: Negative emotions and the use of emotional-avoidance strategies were elevated, and positive emotions were reduced, in fibromyalgia patients; the alexithymia scale difficulty identifying feelings showed a large deviation from normal. Emotional-approach measures were not deviant. In the fibromyalgia sample, emotional-avoidance strategies were highly correlated with more mental distress and were modestly correlated with more pain and fatigue, while emotional-approach strategies were only minimally related to better functioning. We tested two interaction models. The intense experiencing of emotions was related to more pain only in patients who lack the ability to process or describe emotions. Although fibromyalgia patients showed deficits in the experiencing of positive affect, positive affect did not buffer the association between pain and negative affect. Conclusion: This study demonstrates increased negative emotions and decreased positive emotions, as well as increased emotional-avoidance strategies, in women with fibromyalgia. Research should test whether interventions that reduce emotional avoidance lead to health improvements in women with fibromyalgia. (c) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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