Abnormal Autonomic Nervous Regulation in Patients with Globus Pharyngeus.

Dig Dis Sci

Department of Physiology, Jessenius Faculty of Medicine in Martin, Comenius University in Bratislava, Bratislava, Slovakia.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Globulus pharyngeus is a harmless sensation of having a lump in the throat, with stress potentially playing a key role in its development.* -
  • The study compared patients with globus pharyngeus to healthy individuals by assessing their autonomic nervous system's response to stress through various tests.* -
  • Results showed that patients displayed reduced baroreflex sensitivity and altered blood pressure and heart rate variability, suggesting a disrupted stress response that could inform personalized treatments like biofeedback.*

Article Abstract

Background: Globus pharyngeus could be described as a benign sensation of lump or foreign object in the throat. The etiology of the globus as a solitary syndrome is still unknown, but it is proposed that stress could have an important role in symptom emergence.

Aims: To evaluate the autonomic nervous regulation in patients with globus compared to healthy controls in reaction to stress.

Methods: Patients included in the study were diagnosed based on ROME IV criteria for Disorders of Gut Brain Interaction. Besides globus, the patients did not suffer any other substantial medical condition. As a control group, measurement of healthy volunteers was performed. Both groups underwent the same stress protocol assessment in the same laboratory settings. The protocol consist of two types of stressors: cold pressor test and mental arithmetic test to test different types of autonomic reactivity.

Results: Baroreflex sensitivity was significantly decreased in patients compared to controls in all phases of the protocol. Low-frequency band of systolic blood pressure variability was significantly increased during both stress phases in patients compared to controls. High-frequency band of heart rate variability was significantly decreased in patients compared to controls during the both of the stress phases.

Conclusion: The results of this study shows discrete abnormalities in complex autonomic reflex control which are predominantly manifested in response to stressful stimuli indicating altered neurocardiac regulation as a reaction to stress associated with globus pharynegus. This fact could have an important role in the personalized management of globus patients such as biofeedback.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11602782PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10620-024-08694-1DOI Listing

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