Higher Psychological and Psychovegetative Strain in Adolescents with Atypical Pigment Naevi
Michael Trapp, Josef Wilhelm Egger, Hans-Peter Kapfhammer, Eva-Maria Trapp, Peter Michael Rohrer, Nina Hörlesberger, Gerold Schwantzer, Peter Komericki, Michael Dennis Linder, Andrey Lvov, Johannes Baulmann, Erika Richtig
DOI: 10.2340/00015555-1837
Abstract
An observational, exploratory, cross-sectional study was performed to assess whether the presence of atypical naevi (AN) in adolescents is associated with psychological and psychovegetative stress parameters. Fifty-one students of a secondary school in Graz, Austria, completed a defined test procedure consisting of an initial period of rest, a standardised mental stress task, another period rest and a questionnaire, the change-sensitive symptom list (ASS-SYM). Electrocardiogram and blood pressure were recorded continuously. The study population was divided in two groups: probands without AN (NAN, n=33), and probands with at least one AN (n=18). We found higher values for the AN group in all scales of ASS-SYM, reaching statistical significance in the dimensions “nervousness and mental tension” (p=0.025), “psychophysiological dysregulation” (p=0.020), burden of pain” (p=0.023) and “general symptoms and problems” (p=0.031). Regarding physiological parameters, the AN group showed higher vegetative strain reflected in heart rate and > heart rate varibility during the periods of rest as well as a reduced baroreceptor sensitivity. On the basis of our results, the presence of AN in adolescents seems to be associated with a higher vegetative arousal. Additionally, participants with AN complained significantly more often about stress-associated general psychological symptoms and problems.An observational, exploratory, cross-sectional study was performed to assess whether the presence of atypical naevi (AN) in adolescents is associated with psychological and psychovegetative stress parameters. Fifty-one students of a secondary school in Graz, Austria, completed a defined test procedure consisting of an initial period of rest, a standardised mental stress task, another period rest and a questionnaire, the change-sensitive symptom list (ASS-SYM). Electrocardiogram and blood pressure were recorded continuously. The study population was divided in two groups: probands without AN (NAN, n=33), and probands with at least one AN (n=18). We found higher values for the AN group in all scales of ASS-SYM, reaching statistical significance in the dimensions “nervousness and mental tension” (p=0.025), “psychophysiological dysregulation” (p=0.020), burden of pain” (p=0.023) and “general symptoms and problems” (p=0.031). Regarding physiological parameters, the AN group showed higher vegetative strain reflected in heart rate and > heart rate varibility during the periods of rest as well as a reduced baroreceptor sensitivity. On the basis of our results, the presence of AN in adolescents seems to be associated with a higher vegetative arousal. Additionally, participants with AN complained significantly more often about stress-associated general psychological symptoms and problems.
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