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Featured researches published by K Stegen.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2000

Generalization of acquired somatic symptoms in response to odors: a pavlovian perspective on multiple chemical sensitivity.

Stephan Devriese; Winnie Winters; K Stegen; Ilse Van Diest; Hendrik Veulemans; Benoit Nemery; Paul Eelen; Karel P. Van de Woestijne; Omer Van den Bergh

Objective Somatic symptoms that occur in response to odors can be acquired in a pavlovian conditioning paradigm. The present study investigated 1) whether learned symptoms can generalize to new odors, 2) whether the generalization gradient is linked to the affective or irritant quality of the new odors, and 3) whether the delay between acquisition and testing modulates generalization. Methods Conditional odor stimuli (CS) were (diluted) ammonia and niaouli. One odor was mixed with 7.4% CO2-enriched air (unconditional stimulus) during 2-minute breathing trials (CS+ trial), and the other odor was presented with air (CS− trial). Three CS+ and three CS− trials were conducted in a semirandomized order (acquisition phase). The test phase involved one CS+-only (CS+ without CO2) and one CS− test trial, followed by three trials using new odors (butyric acid, acetic acid, and citric aroma). Half of the subjects (N = 28) were tested immediately, and the other half were tested after 1 week. Ventilatory responses were measured during and somatic symptoms were measured after each trial. Results Participants had more symptoms in response to CS+-only exposures, but only when ammonia was used as the CS+. Also, generalization occurred: More symptoms were reported in response to butyric and acetic acid than to citric aroma and only in participants who had been conditioned. Both the selective conditioning and the generalization effect were mediated by negative affectivity of the participants. The delay between the acquisition and test phases had no effect. Conclusions Symptoms that occur in response to odorous substances can be learned and generalize to new substances, especially in persons with high negative affectivity. The findings further support the plausibility of a pavlovian perspective of multiple chemical sensitivity.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 1996

Influence of breathing therapy on complaints, anxiety and breathing pattern in patients with hyperventilation syndrome and anxiety disorders

J.N. Han; K Stegen; C. De Valck; J. Clément; Kp Van de Woestijne

The effect of breathing therapy was evaluated in patients with hyperventilation syndrome (HVS). The diagnosis of HVS was based on the presence of several suggestive complaints occurring in the context of stress, and reproduced by voluntary hyperventilation. Organic diseases as a cause of the symptoms were excluded. Most of these patients met the criteria for an anxiety disorder. The therapy was conducted in the following sequence: (1) brief, voluntary hyperventilation to reproduce the complaints in daily life: (2) reattribution of the cause of the symptoms to hyperventilation: (3) explaining the rationale of therapy-reduction of hyperventilation by acquiring an abdominal breathing pattern, with slowing down of expiration: and (4) breathing retraining for 2 to 3 months by a physiotherapist. After breathing therapy, the sum scores of the Nijmegen Questionnaire were markedly reduced. Improvements were registered in 10 of the 16 complaints of the questionnaire. The level of anxiety evaluated by means of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) decreased slightly. The breathing pattern was modified significantly after breathing retraining. Mean values of inspiration and expiration time and tidal volume increased, but end-tidal CO2 concentration (FETCO2) was not significantly modified except in the group of younger women (< or = 28 years). A canonical correlation analysis relating the changes of the various complaints to the modifications of breathing variables showed that the improvement of the complaints was correlated mainly with the slowing down of breathing frequency. The favorable influence of breathing retraining on complaints thus appeared to be a consequence of its influence primarily on breathing frequency, rather than on FETCO2.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1999

Acquisition and extinction of somatic symptoms in response to odours: a Pavlovian paradigm relevant to multiple chemical sensitivity.

O. Van den Bergh; K Stegen; I. Van Diest; C. Raes; P. Stulens; Paul Eelen; Hendrik Veulemans; Kp Van de Woestijne; Benoit Nemery

OBJECTIVES: Multiple chemical sensitivity is a poorly understood syndrome in which various symptoms are triggered by chemically unrelated, but often odorous substances, at doses below those known to be harmful. This study focuses on the process of pavlovian acquisition and extinction of somatic symptoms triggered by odours. METHODS: Diluted ammonia and butyric acid were odorous conditioned stimuli (CS). The unconditioned stimulus (US) was 7.4% CO2 enriched air. One odour (CS+) was presented together with the US for 2 minutes (CS+ trial), and the other odour (CS-) was presented with air (CS-trial). Three CS+ and three CS-exposures were run in a semi-randomised order; this as the acquisition (conditioning) phase. To test the effect of the conditioning, each subject then had one CS+ only--that is, CS+ without CO2--and one CS- test exposure. Next, half the subjects (n = 32) received five additional CS+ only exposures (extinction group), while the other half received five exposures to breathing air (wait group). Finally, all subjects got one CS+ only test exposure to test the effect of the extinction. Ventilatory responses were measured during and somatic symptoms after each exposure. RESULTS: More symptoms were reported upon exposure to CS+ only than to CS-odours, regardless of the odour type. Altered respiratory rate was only found when ammonia was CS+. Five extinction trials were sufficient to reduce the level of acquired symptoms. CONCLUSION: Subjects can acquire somatic symptoms and altered respiratory behaviour in response to harmless, but odorous chemical substances, if these odours have been associated with a physiological challenge that originally had caused these symptoms. The conditioned symptoms can subsequently be reduced in an extinction procedure. The study further supports the plausibility of a pavlovian conditioning hypothesis to explain the pathogenesis of MCS.


Biological Psychology | 1996

Negative affect, respiratory reactivity, and somatic complaints in a CO2 enriched air inhalation paradigm

K Stegen; An Neujens; Geert Crombez; Dirk Hermans; Karel P. Van de Woestijne; Omer Van den Bergh

Subjects scoring high on negative affectivity (NA) are known to report more psychosomatic complaints than subjects scoring low. According to the symptom perception hypothesis, high NA subjects attend more to somatic sensations and interpret these as more threatening. We investigated the relationship between NA and psychosomatic complaints in a group of high and low NA subjects (N = 72) in, (a) a questionnaire study, and (b) in a laboratory setting. The latter involved the inhalation of three different gas mixtures (room air, 5.5% and 7.5% CO2-enriched air) while respiratory responses were registered. Subjective complaints were measured after each trial. High NA subjects reported more complaints than low NA subjects in the questionnaire study. However, NA had no main effects on complaints in the laboratory study and did not interact with the effects of gas mixture on complaints. During room air trials, NA correlated only with general arousal complaints when a strong respiratory challenge had not been given before. The pattern of results suggests that experimental inductions of complaints may largely wipe out NA-related differences in attentional/interpretative processes that may mediate the NA complaints link.


European Respiratory Journal | 1997

Unsteadiness of breathing in patients with hyperventilation syndrome and anxiety disorders

Jn Han; K Stegen; K Simkens; M. Cauberghs; R Schepers; O. Van den Bergh; J. Clément; Kp Van de Woestijne

The breathing pattern of 399 patients with hyperventilation syndrome (HVS) and/or with anxiety disorders and that of 347 normal controls was investigated during a 5 min period of quiet breathing and after a 3 min period of voluntary hyperventilation. The diagnosis of HVS was based on the presence of several suggestive complaints occurring in the context of stress, and reproduced by voluntary hyperventilation. Organic diseases as a cause of the symptoms were excluded. The anxiety disorders were diagnosed by means of an abbreviated version of the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule (ADIS). There was a large overlap between the two diagnoses. Simply breathing via a mouthpiece and pneumotachograph made end-tidal CO2 fractional concentration (FET,CO2) decrease progressively both in hyperventilators and in patients with anxiety disorders, but not in normals. At the start of the measurement the FET,CO2 was not different between patients and healthy subjects. In patients < or = 28 yrs, the decrease of FET,CO2 resulted from a higher tidal volume, and in patients > or = 29 years from an increase in frequency. After voluntary hyperventilation, the recovery of FET,CO2, was delayed in patients, due to a slower normalization of respiratory frequency in females and in older males, and of tidal volume in younger males, and also due to less frequent end-expiratory pauses. When breathing was recorded first by means of inductive plethysmography (Respitrace), the progressive decline of FET,CO2 seen in patients was not observed: from the onset of the recording, FET,CO2 was reduced in patients. It did not change further when, immediately afterwards, the subject switched to mouthpiece breathing. The finding that breathing through a mouthpiece induces hyperventilation in patients and that recovery of FET,CO2 is delayed after voluntary hyperventilation, suggests that the respiratory control system is less resistant to challenges (mouthpiece or voluntary hyperventilation) in those patients. On the other hand, the lower values of FET,CO2 measured during recording by means of a Respitrace probably result from a challenge, prior to the recordings, induced by the fitting of the measuring device to the patient. This unsteadiness of breathing characterizes patients with hyperventilation syndrome and those with anxiety disorders, but is not sufficiently sensitive to be used for individual diagnosis.


European Respiratory Journal | 1997

Influence of awareness of the recording of breathing on respiratory pattern in healthy humans

Jn Han; K Stegen; M. Cauberghs; Kp Van de Woestijne

This study was designed to test whether awareness of the measurement of breathing influences the breathing pattern in healthy subjects under routine laboratory conditions. Seventy four subjects (40 females and 34 males), aged 21-63 yrs, were studied under three different conditions whilst their breathing was being recorded for 5 min by means of inductance plethysmography (Respitrace): 1) subjects were misled into believing that their breathing was not being recorded but that they had to wait for 5 min whilst equipment was calibrated; 2) subjects were instructed that their breathing pattern was being recorded for 5 min; 3) the subjects breathing was recorded for 5 min with mouthpiece and pneumotachograph. The first two conditions were randomized. The Respitrace was calibrated by means of multiple linear regression carried out during the 5 min period of quiet breathing through a mouthpiece. Awareness of the recording of breathing caused prolongation of inspiratory (tI) and expiratory time (tE). Breathing through the mouthpiece resulted in an increase of tI, tE and tidal volume (VT). The breathing irregularities (sighs and end-expiratory pauses) decreased when subjects were aware of the recording of breathing and nearly disappeared when subjects breathed through the mouthpiece. The end-tidal carbon dioxide concentration was not significantly different between the three conditions. Mouthpiece breathing often induced some respiratory discomfort and even anxiety, particularly in females. Awareness by the subject that his or her breathing was being recorded altered the spontaneous breathing pattern, mainly the breathing frequency. In addition, use of a mouthpiece markedly increased tidal volume, particularly in females in whom mouthpiece breathing induced more complaints than in males.


Health Psychology | 1998

MEMORY EFFECTS ON SYMPTOM REPORTING IN A RESPIRATORY LEARNING PARADIGM

Omer Van den Bergh; K Stegen; Karel P. Van de Woestijne

With odors as conditioned stimuli (CSs) and CO2-enriched air as the unconditioned stimulus, participants learned to exhibit respiratory responses and somatic complaints on presentation of only the odor CS+. Studied was whether complaints during CS+-only trials were inferred from the conditioned somatic responses or were based on activated memory of the complaints during acquisition. Participants (N = 56) were either attentionally directed away or not from the complaints during acquisition, and the effects on somatic complaints during test were studied. Respiratory responses, heart rate, and somatic complaints were measured. No physiological conditioning effects were found. However, more complaints were reported to the CS+ than to the CS- odor, but only when the CS+ was foul smelling. This effect was modulated by the attention manipulation, showing that the learned complaints during the test phase were based on memory of the acquisition complaints and not on physiological responses during the test.


Cognition & Emotion | 2001

Do persons with negative affect have an attentional bias to bodily sensations

K Stegen; Ilse Van Diest; Karel P. Van de Woestijne; Omer Vann De Bergh

The association between negative affectivity (NA) and health complaints is thought to reflect a stronger attentional focus on bodily sensations in high NA persons. Perceiving these sensations as rather threatening, high NA persons may scan their internal environment for impending signs of pain and trouble. Using an on-line registration of attentional deployment, we tested whether high NA persons were allocating more attentional resources to internal sensations and less to external stimuli compared to low NA persons. High and low NA participants (N = 68) performed a Stroop-like primary task during a number of trials in which: (1) only an internal; (2) only an external; or (3) both an internal and an external stimulus could occur. Internal stimuli consisted of 7.5% carbon dioxide administrations, causing slight increases in ventilation. An increase in time interval between successive tones served as the external stimulus. Participants were asked to press a button when they noticed one of both events. Results showed that high NA participants: (1) detected the effects of a first respiratory stimulus faster; (2) performed poorer on the tone task when anticipating a respiratory challenge; (3) performed slower on the Stroop task during respiratory stimuli. These findings may indicate that high NA participants show a stronger attentional bias to internal sensations.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 1998

SUBJECTIVE SYMPTOMS AND BREATHING PATTERN AT REST AND FOLLOWING HYPERVENTILATION IN ANXIETY AND SOMATOFORM DISORDERS

J.N. Han; K Stegen; R Schepers; O. Van den Bergh; Kp Van de Woestijne

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the diagnostic specificity of bodily symptoms and respiratory behavior at rest and after a hyperventilation provocation test (HVPT) in patients that were either grouped according to the DSM classification or diagnosed as suffering from hyperventilation syndrome. Nine hundred three anxiety and somatoform patients, showing symptoms supposedly caused by psychogenic hyperventilation, and 170 healthy subjects, were studied. Breathing pattern and end-tidal CO2 concentration were recorded during breathing at rest and following a HVPT. Subjective symptoms in daily life and after HVPT were measured. A principal-components analysis was performed on both the symptoms and breathing variables and their specificity levels were compared in the two classifications of patients. Some symptoms in daily life were grouped together with the same symptoms after the HVPT, other symptoms were not. This suggests that the HVPT elicited partly specific symptoms, and partly reproduced the symptoms experienced in daily life. Similar findings were observed with respect to the breathing variables. Patients with panic differed from other patients with anxiety disorders by an increased level of symptoms and a FETCO2 decline at rest. The HVPT may be informative for diagnosis because it provokes some of the typical somatic and psychological symptoms, and it identifies the breathing instability that is characteristic of both patients with HVS and with anxiety. The same symptoms and breathing variables characterized the patients, whatever their classification. Overall, the specificity of breathing variables is rather low.


Biological Psychology | 2000

Hyperventilation and attention: effects of hypocapnia on performance in a stroop task

Ilse Van Diest; K Stegen; Karel P. Van de Woestijne; Nathalie Schippers; Omer Van den Bergh

This study aimed to investigate the effect of hypocapnia on attentional performance. Hyperventilation, producing hypocapnia, is associated with physiological changes in the brain and with subjective symptoms of dizziness, concentration problems and derealization. In this study (N=42), we examined cognitive performance on a Stroop-like task, following either 3 min of hypocapnic or normocapnic overbreathing. Both overbreathing trials were run on separate days, each preceded by a baseline trial with the same task during normal breathing. More and other symptoms were reported after hypocapnia compared to normocapnia. Also, more errors were made and progressively slower reaction times (RTs) were observed during recovery from hypocapnia. These performance deficits were only found in participants characterized by apneas. The number of symptoms did not correlate with RTs or errors. The pattern of data suggested that hypoxia, as a result of apneas during recovery from hypocapnia, caused the cognitive performance deficit.

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Omer Van den Bergh

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Kp Van de Woestijne

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Ilse Van Diest

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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O. Van den Bergh

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Stephan Devriese

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Winnie Winters

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jn Han

Peking Union Medical College Hospital

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Benoit Nemery

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Hendrik Veulemans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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