Association of Self-Reported Autonomic Symptoms With Sensor-Based Physiological Measures

Author:

Kolacz JacekORCID,Chen Xiwei,Nix Evan J.,Roath Olivia K.ORCID,Holmes Logan G.,Tokash Clarissa,Porges Stephen W.ORCID,Lewis Gregory F.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective Autonomic regulation of organ and tissues may give rise to disruptions of typical functions. The Body Perception Questionnaire Short Form (BPQ-SF) includes items that were developed to assess autonomic symptoms in daily life. This pair of studies aimed to establish previously unexplored psychometric properties of the BPQ-SF autonomic symptoms scale, develop normative values for clinical and research use, and assess the convergence of self-reports with sensor-based measures. Methods Study 1 reports exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis on BPQ-SF autonomic symptom items from a large US population-based online study (n = 2048). In study 2, BPQ-SF scores were examined for associations with heart period, respiratory sinus arrhythmia, and skin conductance during seated leg lifts in a community sample (n = 62). Results Study 1 results supported a two-factor supradiaphragmatic and subdiaphragmatic autonomic symptom solution (confirmatory factor analysis: root mean squared error of approximation = 0.040, Comparative Fit Index = 0.99, Tucker-Lewis Index = 0.99), although a one-factor solution also fit the data well (root mean squared error of approximation = 0.080, Comparative Fit Index = 0.99, Tucker-Lewis Index = 0.99). In study 2, heart period responses to leg lifts and rests were demonstrated at all autonomic symptom levels. However, low autonomic symptoms were associated with optimal autonomic nervous system patterns of activation and recovery to baseline levels. Moderate symptoms were associated with prolonged sympathetic activation. The highest symptom levels were associated with impaired autonomic nervous system coordination across activation and recovery. Conclusions Results support the utility of self-reports of autonomic symptoms in research and clinical applications, with higher symptoms likely indicating autonomic impairment.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology

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