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How do self-assessment of Alexithymia and sensitivity to bodily sensations relate to alcohol consumption?

How do self-assessment of Alexithymia and sensitivity to bodily sensations relate to alcohol consumption?
How do self-assessment of Alexithymia and sensitivity to bodily sensations relate to alcohol consumption?
Background: Alexithymia describes an abnormality of emotional experience that is commonly expressed among individuals with addiction and alcohol abuse disorders. Alexithymic individuals are characterized by difficulties in identifying and describing their emotions. This impairment is linked to the development and maintenance of addiction. Moreover, an emergent theory suggests alexithymia is itself secondary to a failure of interoception (sensitivity to internal bodily signals, including physiological arousal states).
Methods: This study tested for hypothesized contributory roles of alexithymia and dysfunctional interoception in the expression of social drinking. Alexithymia, subjective sensitivity to bodily sensations, and alcohol consumption scores were quantified using the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, the Body Perception Questionnaire, and the Alcohol Use Questionnaire, respectively, in a normative sample (N = 600). Regression and bootstrapping mediation analyses were used to test the hypothesis that alexithymia mediated the association between sensitivity to bodily sensations and alcohol consumption.
Results: Alexithymia was positively correlated with sensitivity to bodily sensations and with alcohol consumption. Mediation analysis revealed that alexithymia, and more precisely, difficulty in identifying feelings, mediated the relationship between sensitivity to bodily sensations and alcohol consumption, such that the predictive effect of sensitivity to bodily sensations on alcohol intake became nonsignificant when controlling for alexithymia.
Conclusions: These results indicate that alexithymia is associated with subjective hypersensitivity to bodily sensations. Moreover, our findings support the theoretical proposal that alexithymia is an expression of impaired processing of bodily sensations including physiological arousal, which underpin the development of maladaptive coping strategies, including alcohol use disorders. Our observations extend a growing literature emphasizing the importance of interoception and alexithymia in addiction, which can inform the development of new therapeutic strategies.
Adolescent, Adult, Affective Symptoms/diagnosis, Aged, Alcohol Drinking/epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self-Assessment, Sensation/physiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult
0145-6008
81-88
Betka, Sophie
aa66b53b-e8de-4e42-8d64-bc43952fd01c
Pfeifer, Gaby
5ad2b108-e9c1-4a06-b41e-ad056977d54d
Garfinkel, Sarah
2dae6b79-1fff-4914-ba74-5a4843155f34
Prins, Hielke
688fe811-ba31-4424-819a-b14662165486
Bond, Rod
09032cd6-5c31-468f-b37c-a851befd999b
Sequeira, Henrique
17e870bf-51f0-4b29-87d3-34ce43bd0dfa
Duka, Theodora
c6623a44-c48c-4385-922c-b2ba3fb9210d
Critchley, Hugo
801271dd-43f8-4aba-bf08-6b82e28526d6
et al.
Betka, Sophie
aa66b53b-e8de-4e42-8d64-bc43952fd01c
Pfeifer, Gaby
5ad2b108-e9c1-4a06-b41e-ad056977d54d
Garfinkel, Sarah
2dae6b79-1fff-4914-ba74-5a4843155f34
Prins, Hielke
688fe811-ba31-4424-819a-b14662165486
Bond, Rod
09032cd6-5c31-468f-b37c-a851befd999b
Sequeira, Henrique
17e870bf-51f0-4b29-87d3-34ce43bd0dfa
Duka, Theodora
c6623a44-c48c-4385-922c-b2ba3fb9210d
Critchley, Hugo
801271dd-43f8-4aba-bf08-6b82e28526d6

Betka, Sophie, Pfeifer, Gaby and Garfinkel, Sarah , et al. (2018) How do self-assessment of Alexithymia and sensitivity to bodily sensations relate to alcohol consumption? Alcoholism Clinical and Experimental Research, 42 (1), 81-88. (doi:10.1111/acer.13542).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Alexithymia describes an abnormality of emotional experience that is commonly expressed among individuals with addiction and alcohol abuse disorders. Alexithymic individuals are characterized by difficulties in identifying and describing their emotions. This impairment is linked to the development and maintenance of addiction. Moreover, an emergent theory suggests alexithymia is itself secondary to a failure of interoception (sensitivity to internal bodily signals, including physiological arousal states).
Methods: This study tested for hypothesized contributory roles of alexithymia and dysfunctional interoception in the expression of social drinking. Alexithymia, subjective sensitivity to bodily sensations, and alcohol consumption scores were quantified using the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, the Body Perception Questionnaire, and the Alcohol Use Questionnaire, respectively, in a normative sample (N = 600). Regression and bootstrapping mediation analyses were used to test the hypothesis that alexithymia mediated the association between sensitivity to bodily sensations and alcohol consumption.
Results: Alexithymia was positively correlated with sensitivity to bodily sensations and with alcohol consumption. Mediation analysis revealed that alexithymia, and more precisely, difficulty in identifying feelings, mediated the relationship between sensitivity to bodily sensations and alcohol consumption, such that the predictive effect of sensitivity to bodily sensations on alcohol intake became nonsignificant when controlling for alexithymia.
Conclusions: These results indicate that alexithymia is associated with subjective hypersensitivity to bodily sensations. Moreover, our findings support the theoretical proposal that alexithymia is an expression of impaired processing of bodily sensations including physiological arousal, which underpin the development of maladaptive coping strategies, including alcohol use disorders. Our observations extend a growing literature emphasizing the importance of interoception and alexithymia in addiction, which can inform the development of new therapeutic strategies.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 25 October 2017
Published date: 2 January 2018
Additional Information: Copyright © 2017 by the Research Society on Alcoholism.
Keywords: Adolescent, Adult, Affective Symptoms/diagnosis, Aged, Alcohol Drinking/epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self-Assessment, Sensation/physiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult

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Local EPrints ID: 475513
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475513
ISSN: 0145-6008
PURE UUID: eda04993-d119-474e-806a-cc695c3dee2b
ORCID for Gaby Pfeifer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8737-1255

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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2023 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:15

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Contributors

Author: Sophie Betka
Author: Gaby Pfeifer ORCID iD
Author: Sarah Garfinkel
Author: Hielke Prins
Author: Rod Bond
Author: Henrique Sequeira
Author: Theodora Duka
Author: Hugo Critchley
Corporate Author: et al.

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