The presence of attentional and interpretation biases in patients with severe MS-related fatigue

Marieke de Gier, Joukje M Oosterman, Alicia M Hughes, Rona Moss-Morris, Colette Hirsch, Heleen Beckerman, Vincent de Groot, Hans Knoop

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Objective: Severe fatigue is a prevalent and disabling symptom in multiple sclerosis (MS). This study tested if a fatigue- and physical activity-related attentional bias (AB) and a somatic interpretation bias (IB) are present in severely fatigued patients with MS. Biases were compared to healthy controls and patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). Method: Severely fatigued patients with MS or ME/CFS and healthy controls completed a Visual Probe Task (VPT) assessing fatigue- and physical activity-related AB and an IB task that assesses the tendency to interpret ambiguous information in either a somatically threatening way or in a more neutral manner. The VPT was completed by 38 MS patients, 44 ME/CFS patients, and 46 healthy controls; the IB task was completed by 156, 40 and 46 participants respectively. Results: ANOVA showed no statistically significant group differences in a fatigue-related AB or physical activity-related AB (omnibus test of interaction between topic × condition: F 2,125 = 1.87; p =.159). Both patient groups showed a tendency to interpret ambiguous information in a somatically threatening way compared to healthy controls (F 1,2 = 27.61, p <.001). This IB was significantly stronger in MS patients compared to ME/CFS patients. IB was significantly correlated with cognitive responses to symptoms in MS patients. Conclusion: MS patients tend to interpret ambiguous information in a somatically threatening way. This may feed into unhelpful ways of dealing with symptoms, possibly contributing to the perpetuation of severe fatigue in MS.

Original languageEnglish
JournalBritish Journal of Health Psychology
Early online date4 Apr 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 4 Apr 2024

Keywords

  • attentional bias
  • fatigue
  • interpretation bias
  • multiple sclerosis

Cite this