Journal Article10.1038/s41598-024-62960-w
A single-arm, open-label pilot study of neuroimaging, behavioral, and peripheral inflammatory correlates of mindfulness-based stress reduction in multiple sclerosis
Christopher C. Hemond,Mugdha Deshpande,Idanis Berrios-Morales,Shaokuan Zheng,Jerrold S. Meyer,George M. Slavich,Steve W. Cole +6 more
TL;DR: A single-arm, open-label pilot study investigating the effects of mindfulness-based stress reduction on inflammatory and behavioral outcomes in multiple sclerosis. MBSR was associated with improvements in behavioral outcomes and changes in inflammatory markers.
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Abstract: Abstract Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic neurological disease frequently associated with significant fatigue, anxiety, depression, and stress. These symptoms are difficult to treat, and prominently contribute to the decreases in quality of life observed with MS. The underlying mechanisms of these “silent” symptoms are not well understood and include not just the psychological responses to a chronic disease, but also biological contributions from bidirectional psycho-neuro-immune (dys)regulation of systemic inflammatory biology. To address these issues, we conducted a prospective, observational pilot study to investigate the psychological, biological, and neuroarchitecture changes associated with a mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) program in MS. The overarching hypothesis was that MBSR modulates systemic and central nervous system inflammation via top-down neurocognitive control over forebrain limbic areas responsible for the neurobiological stress response. 23 patients were enrolled in MBSR and assessed pre/post-program with structural 3 T MRI, behavioral measures, hair cortisol, and blood measures of peripheral inflammation, as indexed by the Conserved Transcriptional Response to Adversity (CTRA) profile. MBSR was associated with improvements across a variety of behavioral outcomes, as well as on-study enlargement of the head of the right hippocampus. The CTRA analyses revealed that greater inflammatory gene expression was related to worse patient-reported anxiety, depression, stress, and loneliness, in addition to lower eudaimonic well-being. Hair cortisol did not significantly change from pre- to post-MBSR. These results support the use of MBSR in MS and elucidate inflammatory mechanisms related to key patient-reported outcomes in this population.
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Citations
Neurobiological Changes Induced by Mindfulness and Meditation: A Systematic Review
Andrea Calderone,Desiree Latella,Federica Impellizzeri,Paolo de Pasquale,Fausto Famà,Angelo Quartarone,R. S. Calabrò +6 more
TL;DR: This systematic review synthesizes research on neurobiological changes induced by mindfulness and meditation, highlighting enhancements in emotional regulation, brain structure, and stress resilience, particularly through Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) practices.
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The Effect of Mindfulness Meditation Training on Biological Acute Stress Responses in Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Elizabeth A. Hoge,Elizabeth A. Hoge,Eric Bui,Sophie A. Palitz,Noah R. Schwarz,Maryann E. Owens,Jennifer M. Johnston,Mark H. Pollack,Naomi M. Simon +8 more
TL;DR: It is found that larger reductions in stress markers for patients with GAD are found in the MBSR class compared to control; this provides the first combined hormonal and immunological evidence that MBSr may enhance resilience to stress.
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TL;DR: A rich repertoire of plasticity is likely to represent an important building block for dynamic, experience-dependent modulation of neuroendocrine stress adaptation.
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The Symbol Digit Modalities Test as sentinel test for cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosis.
J. Van Schependom,J. Van Schependom,Marie B. D'hooghe,Krista Cleynhens,Mieke D'hooge,Marie-Claire Haelewyck,de Jacques Keyser,Guy Nagels,Guy Nagels +8 more
TL;DR: This paper aims to assess the performance of the SDMT in predicting the outcome of an extensive battery of neuropsychological test batteries for cognitive impairment in MS.
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Bayesian longitudinal segmentation of hippocampal substructures in brain MRI using subject-specific atlases.
Juan Eugenio Iglesias,Koen Van Leemput,Jean C. Augustinack,Ricardo Insausti,Bruce Fischl,Martin Reuter +5 more
TL;DR: A generative model for dedicated longitudinal segmentation that relies on subject-specific atlases and is evaluated using over 4700 scans from two publicly available datasets (ADNI and MIRIAD).
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Automated segmentation of the Hypothalamus and associated subunits in brain MRI
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