Persistent Physical Symptoms as Perceptual Dysregulation: A Neuropsychobehavioral Model and Its Clinical Implications, 2018, Henningsen et al

Andy

Retired committee member
Probably a load of meaningless psychobabble but I'm posting in case it's of use to anybody interested in this side of things.
Objective The mechanisms underlying the perception and experience of persistent physical symptoms are not well understood, and in the models, the specific relevance of peripheral input versus central processing, or of neurobiological versus psychosocial factors in general, is not clear. In this article, we proposed a model for this clinical phenomenon that is designed to be coherent with an underlying, relatively new model of the normal brain functions involved in the experience of bodily signals.

Methods Based on a review of recent literature, we describe central elements of this model and its clinical implications.

Results In the model, the brain is seen as an active predictive processing or inferential device rather than one that is passively waiting for sensory input. A central aspect of the model is the attempt of the brain to minimize prediction errors that result from constant comparisons of predictions and sensory input. Two possibilities exist: adaptation of the generative model underlying the predictions or alteration of the sensory input via autonomic nervous activation (in the case of interoception). Following this model, persistent physical symptoms can be described as “failures of inference” and clinically well-known factors such as expectation are assigned a role, not only in the later amplification of bodily signals but also in the very basis of symptom perception.

Conclusions We discuss therapeutic implications of such a model including new interpretations for established treatments as well as new options such as virtual reality techniques combining exteroceptive and interoceptive information.
Paywall, https://journals.lww.com/psychosoma...istent_Physical_Symptoms_as_Perceptual.4.aspx
Sci Hub, https://sci-hub.se/10.1097/PSY.0000000000000588
 
This is the same off the peg magpie approach that Mark Edwards has used. Predictive coding is trendy, biopsycho is trendy, let's have predictive coding biopsycho.

But when I went through Mark Edwards's model the problem was that it gave the opposite prediction to the one he claimed it did. The prediction error model does not work. If you are predicting pain and feel pain then it should be less painful, not more painful. The people with severe pain should be the ones never expecting it.

When I recently wrote a chapter on the modern implications of Descartes's analysis I initially thought I might have a final section exploring ME because it seemed to me that this was an important practical implication of understanding Descartes properly. I cut it out because I did not think I could do justice to the complexity of the ME case within an essay on Descartes. I was also unsure that I had my thoughts clearly enough organised. Maybe it is time to address this in a different essay. The only problem is where on earth would one get it published. The only place I can think of that used to do anything similar in reasonable depth was New York Review of Books. But even that seems to have slipped into cliché.

I am beginning to think that there is a much better neurobiological model to consider, relating to inability to clear sensory input after processing - particularly during sleep. Maybe there is a single underlying signalling mechanism that also leads to an inability to clear immune signals after processing - inability of the immune system to forget a virus, sort of.
 
I am beginning to think that there is a much better neurobiological model to consider, relating to inability to clear sensory input after processing - particularly during sleep. Maybe there is a single underlying signalling mechanism that also leads to an inability to clear immune signals after processing - inability of the immune system to forget a virus, sort of.

How very intriguing... I know nothing about signalling, but it sounds like it would fit with my experience. I hope you'll explore that idea further.
 
Pain is a highly evolved survival mechanism. If you are experiencing pain, you do pay attention and you are meant to pay attention, and your brain will try to find the reason for the pain.

Whatever they are cooking up here, it will be useless clinically for those with severe pain, as well as a demeaning put-down.

Simplistic models of the brain are, well, simplistic.
 
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