Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia -- Common and distinct mechanisms of
emotional adjustment in the mood and anxiety disorders spectrum?
Abstract
Here, we assessed resting respiratory sinus arrythmia (rRSA) and RSA
reactivity (ΔRSA) as common and distinct emotion-adjustment mechanisms
for affective and anxiety disorders and their treatments. We recruited
samples of healthy controls and patients with anxiety and affective
disorders, assessed rRSA during baseline and ΔRSA as RSA-change from
baseline to viewing emotional films. Patients then underwent
disorder-specific Cognitive Behavior Therapy. Although both patient
groups exhibited lower rRSA than controls, depression-, but not
anxiety-symptomatology was transdiagnostically associated with less rRSA
and ΔRSA. Complementing these depression-specific results, better ΔRSA
predicted better treatment-outcome in depression, but not anxiety. Our
data confirm RSA as a transdiagnostic marker for mood and anxiety,
support recent attempts towards transdiagnostic, dimensional
classification systems (HiToP, RDoC) and provide evidence for a more
robust association of RSA with depression-symptomatology and -treatment.
They thus suggest rRSA and ΔRSA as potential markers to assess common
and distinct mechanisms associated with depression and anxiety.