AI Article Synopsis

  • Hypnosis alters the sense of agency and may serve as a non-drug option for managing pain, particularly in patients with fibromyalgia.
  • Ninety-eight fibromyalgia patients were assessed for their hypnotizability and sense of agency regarding pain, with results indicating that responsiveness to specific suggestions (like control and ideomotor) predicted feelings of involuntariness and effortlessness.
  • While hypnotizability showed a correlation with clinical pain outcomes, changes in the sense of agency did not, highlighting potential shared mechanisms that warrant further exploration in pain management strategies.

Article Abstract

Hypnosis is associated with alterations in the sense of agency which can play a role in its utilization as a nonpharmacological option for pain management. The goal of the current study was to examine the relationships between responsiveness to suggestions in hypnosis and alterations of the sense of agency among patients with fibromyalgia. Ninety-eight participants with fibromyalgia underwent two hypnotizability assessments followed by the Sense of Agency Rating Scale. Clinical pain measures were also collected. Involuntariness was predicted by responsiveness to control, ideomotor, and dissociation suggestions. Effortlessness was predicted by responsiveness to control and ideomotor suggestions, and age. Hypnotizability was associated with main clinical pain outcomes, but agency alterations were not. Results suggest a shared mechanism between responsiveness to specific suggestions and the sense of agency in hypnosis. We discuss theoretical and clinical implications for pain management and the need for further research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8645181PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2021.103221DOI Listing

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