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Erschienen in: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine 3/2014

01.06.2014

Pinpointing Moments of High Anxiety During an MRI Examination

verfasst von: Daisy van Minde, Laura Klaming, Hans Weda

Erschienen in: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine | Ausgabe 3/2014

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Abstract

Background

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is associated with high levels of anxiety in many patients which may interfere with image quality and increase examination time. In order to develop effective intervention strategies that decrease anxiety, more insights into moments of high anxiety during a MRI examination are necessary.

Purpose

The present study aimed at obtaining insights into anxiety levels and moments of high anxiety during a Magnetic Resonance Imaging examination.

Method

The study included 67 patients, of whom 52 (77.6 %) were categorized as highly anxious. Stress and anxiety were measured continuously throughout the entire duration of the MRI examination by monitoring the heart rate. An increase in heart rate during the scan was taken as an indication for higher stress and anxiety. In addition to measuring stress and anxiety objectively, anxiety was assessed subjectively before and after the procedure by means of self-report questionnaires.

Results

The self-report data indicate that patients were highly anxious before the MRI examination. Moreover, the electrophysiological data clearly show that anxiety levels were highest at the beginning of the procedure, i.e., when the MRI table moved into the scanner, and then decreased over the course of the examination. Furthermore, the findings show that while subjectively measured anxiety was higher in patients who had taken anxiolytics prior to the MRI examination than in patients who had not taken any anxiolytics, objectively measured anxiety during the scan was equally high in both groups.

Conclusion

The present study provides detailed insights into the anxiety levels during an MRI examination, which may aid in developing effective anxiety-reduction strategies. Additionally, the findings show that measuring anxiety continuously throughout the entire examination using electrophysiology in combination with measuring anxiety subjectively prior to and after the scan provides a more complete assessment of MRI-related anxiety.
Fußnoten
1
Most of the patients who took anxiolytics took oxazepam, which is a benzodiazepine. Benzodiazepines reduce physiological and psychological responses to stress [27].
 
2
The RMSSD data were not suitable for a repeated-measures ANOVA comparing all five time periods because of too many missing values due to unreliable measurement of HRV, which were caused by technical difficulties. Therefore, a paired sample t test comparing only the last two time points with each other was performed.
 
3
This finding could not be replicated when categorizing patients according to high (MRI FSS ≥ 50, N = 22) or low (MRI FSS < 50, N = 38) MRI FSS score [high MRI FSS, M = 119.36 (SD = 21.8); low MRI FSS, M = 116.2 (SD = 15.1); t(58) = −0.66, p = .51], or when categorizing patients according to high (STAIt ≥ 40, N = 37) or low (STAIt < 40, N = 29) trait anxiety score [high STAIt, M = 116 (SD = 14.8); low STAIt, M = 119.8 (SD = 21); t(57) = .81, p = .42].
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Pinpointing Moments of High Anxiety During an MRI Examination
verfasst von
Daisy van Minde
Laura Klaming
Hans Weda
Publikationsdatum
01.06.2014
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
International Journal of Behavioral Medicine / Ausgabe 3/2014
Print ISSN: 1070-5503
Elektronische ISSN: 1532-7558
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12529-013-9339-5

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