Cargando…

Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress

INTRODUCTION: In this research the Paris School (I.P.S.O.), by P. Marty, is chosen as the theoretical and clinical basis of Psychosomatics. We work with the degree of mentalization (good, bad and uncertain) -obtained through Marty’s Psychosomatic Classification-, as a previous diagnosis and prognosi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Delgado Campos, A. M., Alcindor Huelva, P., Alvarez Astorga, A., Rubio Corgo, S., Pérez Vicente, E., Arrieta Pey, M., Diaz Gordillo, C., del Sol Calderón, P., Martín Martín, A. C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10661017/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.1348
_version_ 1785137880620859392
author Delgado Campos, A. M.
Alcindor Huelva, P.
Alvarez Astorga, A.
Rubio Corgo, S.
Pérez Vicente, E.
Arrieta Pey, M.
Diaz Gordillo, C.
del Sol Calderón, P.
Martín Martín, A. C.
author_facet Delgado Campos, A. M.
Alcindor Huelva, P.
Alvarez Astorga, A.
Rubio Corgo, S.
Pérez Vicente, E.
Arrieta Pey, M.
Diaz Gordillo, C.
del Sol Calderón, P.
Martín Martín, A. C.
author_sort Delgado Campos, A. M.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In this research the Paris School (I.P.S.O.), by P. Marty, is chosen as the theoretical and clinical basis of Psychosomatics. We work with the degree of mentalization (good, bad and uncertain) -obtained through Marty’s Psychosomatic Classification-, as a previous diagnosis and prognosis of 120 infertile women undergoing treatment at the Assisted Reproduction Unit (ARU) at Hospital Universitario 12 de Octubre in Madrid. OBJECTIVES: a) To analyse the statistical coincidence between female infertility, stress and alexithymia syndrome. b) To verify the differences between psychosomatic disorders and other somatoform symptoms and syndromes (conversive and hypochondriac). c) To test the following hypothesis: subjects whose degree of mentalization is deficient, present high degree of alexithymia and stress. METHODS: 120 infertile women undergoing treatment with Assisted Reproduction Techniques were examined by means of psychodiagnostic tests. Diagnostic tools: P. Mary’s Psychosomatic Classification (P.C.) (semi-structured interview), as a means of diagnosing the degree of mentalization; T.A.S. (Toronto Alexithymia Scale); Battery of stress measurement questionnaires (H.A.D., PANAS. IRE, MCMQ). The correlation of coincidence between the results of C.P. and the different Alexithymia and Stress questionnaires with the independent variable (success or failure of pregnancy in the selected subjects) has been studied, applying Spearman’s Correlation Coefficient. RESULTS: With respect to what was obtained in the Psychosomatic Classification: - T.A.S. questionnaire yields a coefficient of [-0.48]. Therefore, there is a negative correlation between the degree of mentalization and the presence of alexithymia; in other words, as the degree of mentalization increases, the degree of alexithymia decreases and vice versa; - There is positive correlation [0.39] between the results of Mentalization (Psychosomatic Classification) and the degree of stress; therefore, the existence of stress does not prevent better mentalization. CONCLUSIONS: The present research concludes: a) that people at risk for psychosomatic disorders have high scores on “alexithymia”; b) that patients at high risk for psychosomatic disorders do not necessarily suffer from “stress” situations; c) that there are many indicators in behavior and psychological functioning that differentiate psychosomatic disorders from conversive and hypochondriac disorders - both in their etiology and their development; d) there is a statistical correlation between female infertility and alexithymia; e) there is no statistical correlation between female infertility and stress. DISCLOSURE OF INTEREST: None Declared
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10661017
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-106610172023-07-19 Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress Delgado Campos, A. M. Alcindor Huelva, P. Alvarez Astorga, A. Rubio Corgo, S. Pérez Vicente, E. Arrieta Pey, M. Diaz Gordillo, C. del Sol Calderón, P. Martín Martín, A. C. Eur Psychiatry Abstract INTRODUCTION: In this research the Paris School (I.P.S.O.), by P. Marty, is chosen as the theoretical and clinical basis of Psychosomatics. We work with the degree of mentalization (good, bad and uncertain) -obtained through Marty’s Psychosomatic Classification-, as a previous diagnosis and prognosis of 120 infertile women undergoing treatment at the Assisted Reproduction Unit (ARU) at Hospital Universitario 12 de Octubre in Madrid. OBJECTIVES: a) To analyse the statistical coincidence between female infertility, stress and alexithymia syndrome. b) To verify the differences between psychosomatic disorders and other somatoform symptoms and syndromes (conversive and hypochondriac). c) To test the following hypothesis: subjects whose degree of mentalization is deficient, present high degree of alexithymia and stress. METHODS: 120 infertile women undergoing treatment with Assisted Reproduction Techniques were examined by means of psychodiagnostic tests. Diagnostic tools: P. Mary’s Psychosomatic Classification (P.C.) (semi-structured interview), as a means of diagnosing the degree of mentalization; T.A.S. (Toronto Alexithymia Scale); Battery of stress measurement questionnaires (H.A.D., PANAS. IRE, MCMQ). The correlation of coincidence between the results of C.P. and the different Alexithymia and Stress questionnaires with the independent variable (success or failure of pregnancy in the selected subjects) has been studied, applying Spearman’s Correlation Coefficient. RESULTS: With respect to what was obtained in the Psychosomatic Classification: - T.A.S. questionnaire yields a coefficient of [-0.48]. Therefore, there is a negative correlation between the degree of mentalization and the presence of alexithymia; in other words, as the degree of mentalization increases, the degree of alexithymia decreases and vice versa; - There is positive correlation [0.39] between the results of Mentalization (Psychosomatic Classification) and the degree of stress; therefore, the existence of stress does not prevent better mentalization. CONCLUSIONS: The present research concludes: a) that people at risk for psychosomatic disorders have high scores on “alexithymia”; b) that patients at high risk for psychosomatic disorders do not necessarily suffer from “stress” situations; c) that there are many indicators in behavior and psychological functioning that differentiate psychosomatic disorders from conversive and hypochondriac disorders - both in their etiology and their development; d) there is a statistical correlation between female infertility and alexithymia; e) there is no statistical correlation between female infertility and stress. DISCLOSURE OF INTEREST: None Declared Cambridge University Press 2023-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10661017/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.1348 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Delgado Campos, A. M.
Alcindor Huelva, P.
Alvarez Astorga, A.
Rubio Corgo, S.
Pérez Vicente, E.
Arrieta Pey, M.
Diaz Gordillo, C.
del Sol Calderón, P.
Martín Martín, A. C.
Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress
title Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress
title_full Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress
title_fullStr Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress
title_full_unstemmed Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress
title_short Female infertility, Alexithymia and Stress
title_sort female infertility, alexithymia and stress
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10661017/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.1348
work_keys_str_mv AT delgadocamposam femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT alcindorhuelvap femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT alvarezastorgaa femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT rubiocorgos femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT perezvicentee femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT arrietapeym femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT diazgordilloc femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT delsolcalderonp femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress
AT martinmartinac femaleinfertilityalexithymiaandstress