Abstract
Alexithymia is regarded as a predictor of many chronic physical and neurological diseases, but it has not yet been regarded in connection with different types of dizziness, especially postural phobic vertigo. Patients with alexithymia have difficulties in describing their feelings and sensations; especially, it touches upon the description of neurological symptoms.
The authors examined 84 patients with postural phobic vertigo (PPV): in 14 patients, this disease developed as a result of Ménière’s disease (MD) (men—6, women—8, average age 42 ± 11 years); in 19 patients—as a result of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (men—9, women—10, average age 49 ± 13 years); in 17 patients—after ischemic stroke in the posterior circulation (men—9, women—8, average age—59 ± 7 years); and in 34 patients with presbiataxia who did not tolerate stroke (men—21, women—13, average age—64 ± 12 years). Diagnosis of alexithymia was carried out with the help of the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS) (Russian-language version). According to the results of TAS, 46 patients did not have alexithymia (A− group), 8 patients were in the border zone, and 30 patients corresponded the criteria of alexithymia (A+ group). Patients from the border zone were not evaluated. The patients were prescribed anti-anxiety treatment (beta-phenyl-gamma-aminobutyric acid hydrochloride 250 mg three times a day for 3 weeks). All patients from A− group noted a good effect of treatment, and only in two patients from A+ group, the positive effect was registered. The results of the research show that alexithymia is a predictor of a more severe course of postural phobic vertigo, which requires the development of special approaches to the treatment of this disorder in patients with such cognitive modality. Testing on alexithymia is advisable for all patients with PPV complaints.
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Funding
The reported study was funded by Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR) according to the research project no. 17-04-00575 (for Rady Esin, Elena Gorobets, Oleg Esin, Denis Martyanov) and supported by the program of competitive growth of Kazan Federal University (for Ilshat Khayrullin and Liliya Sakhapova).
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Esin, R., Gorobets, E., Esin, O. et al. Alexithymia as a Predictor of Worse Prognosis in Postural Phobic Vertigo. BioNanoSci. 8, 373–378 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12668-017-0490-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12668-017-0490-3