Cargando…

A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram

BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain in children and adolescents is a well-established method in both clinical practice and in neuroscientific research. This practice is sometimes viewed critically, as MRI scans might expose minors (e.g. through scan-associated fears) to more th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jaite, Charlotte, Kappel, Viola, Napp, Adriane, Sommer, Marcus, Diederichs, Gerd, Weschke, Bernhard, Spors, Birgit, von Moers, Arpad, Lehmkuhl, Ulrike, Bachmann, Christian J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6405132/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30845163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211552
_version_ 1783401022865014784
author Jaite, Charlotte
Kappel, Viola
Napp, Adriane
Sommer, Marcus
Diederichs, Gerd
Weschke, Bernhard
Spors, Birgit
von Moers, Arpad
Lehmkuhl, Ulrike
Bachmann, Christian J.
author_facet Jaite, Charlotte
Kappel, Viola
Napp, Adriane
Sommer, Marcus
Diederichs, Gerd
Weschke, Bernhard
Spors, Birgit
von Moers, Arpad
Lehmkuhl, Ulrike
Bachmann, Christian J.
author_sort Jaite, Charlotte
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain in children and adolescents is a well-established method in both clinical practice and in neuroscientific research. This practice is sometimes viewed critically, as MRI scans might expose minors (e.g. through scan-associated fears) to more than the legally permissible “minimal burden”. While there is evidence that a significant portion of adults undergoing brain MRI scans experience anxiety, data on anxiety in children and adolescents undergoing brain MRI scans is rare. This study therefore aimed to examine the prevalence and level of anxiety in children and adolescents who had MRI scans of the brain, and to compare the results to adults undergoing brain MRI scans, and to children and adolescents undergoing electroencephalography (EEG; which is usually regarded a “minimal burden”). METHOD: Participants were 57 children and adolescents who had a brain MRI scan (MRI-C; mean age 12.9 years), 28 adults who had a brain MRI scan (MRI-A; mean age 43.7 years), and 66 children and adolescents undergoing EEG (EEG-C; mean age 12.9 years). Anxiety was assessed on the subjective (situational anxiety) and on the physiological level (arousal), before and after the respective examination. RESULTS: More than 98% of children and adolescents reported no or only minimal fear during the MRI scan. Both pre- and post-examination, the MRI-C and the MRI-A groups did not differ significantly with respect to situational anxiety (p = 0.262 and p = 0.374, respectively), and to physiological arousal (p = 0.050, p = 0.472). Between the MRI-C and the EEG-C group, there were also no significant differences in terms of situational anxiety (p = 0.525, p = 0.875), or physiological arousal (p = 0.535, p = 0.189). Prior MRI experience did not significantly influence subjective or physiological anxiety parameters. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, children and adolescents undergoing a brain MRI scan did not experience significantly more anxiety than those undergoing an EEG, or adults undergoing MRI scanning. Therefore, a general exclusion of minors from MRI research studies does not appear reasonable.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6405132
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64051322019-03-17 A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram Jaite, Charlotte Kappel, Viola Napp, Adriane Sommer, Marcus Diederichs, Gerd Weschke, Bernhard Spors, Birgit von Moers, Arpad Lehmkuhl, Ulrike Bachmann, Christian J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain in children and adolescents is a well-established method in both clinical practice and in neuroscientific research. This practice is sometimes viewed critically, as MRI scans might expose minors (e.g. through scan-associated fears) to more than the legally permissible “minimal burden”. While there is evidence that a significant portion of adults undergoing brain MRI scans experience anxiety, data on anxiety in children and adolescents undergoing brain MRI scans is rare. This study therefore aimed to examine the prevalence and level of anxiety in children and adolescents who had MRI scans of the brain, and to compare the results to adults undergoing brain MRI scans, and to children and adolescents undergoing electroencephalography (EEG; which is usually regarded a “minimal burden”). METHOD: Participants were 57 children and adolescents who had a brain MRI scan (MRI-C; mean age 12.9 years), 28 adults who had a brain MRI scan (MRI-A; mean age 43.7 years), and 66 children and adolescents undergoing EEG (EEG-C; mean age 12.9 years). Anxiety was assessed on the subjective (situational anxiety) and on the physiological level (arousal), before and after the respective examination. RESULTS: More than 98% of children and adolescents reported no or only minimal fear during the MRI scan. Both pre- and post-examination, the MRI-C and the MRI-A groups did not differ significantly with respect to situational anxiety (p = 0.262 and p = 0.374, respectively), and to physiological arousal (p = 0.050, p = 0.472). Between the MRI-C and the EEG-C group, there were also no significant differences in terms of situational anxiety (p = 0.525, p = 0.875), or physiological arousal (p = 0.535, p = 0.189). Prior MRI experience did not significantly influence subjective or physiological anxiety parameters. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, children and adolescents undergoing a brain MRI scan did not experience significantly more anxiety than those undergoing an EEG, or adults undergoing MRI scanning. Therefore, a general exclusion of minors from MRI research studies does not appear reasonable. Public Library of Science 2019-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6405132/ /pubmed/30845163 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211552 Text en © 2019 Jaite et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jaite, Charlotte
Kappel, Viola
Napp, Adriane
Sommer, Marcus
Diederichs, Gerd
Weschke, Bernhard
Spors, Birgit
von Moers, Arpad
Lehmkuhl, Ulrike
Bachmann, Christian J.
A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram
title A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram
title_full A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram
title_fullStr A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram
title_full_unstemmed A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram
title_short A comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain MRI vs adults undergoing brain MRI vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram
title_sort comparison study of anxiety in children undergoing brain mri vs adults undergoing brain mri vs children undergoing an electroencephalogram
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6405132/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30845163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211552
work_keys_str_mv AT jaitecharlotte acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT kappelviola acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT nappadriane acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT sommermarcus acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT diederichsgerd acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT weschkebernhard acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT sporsbirgit acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT vonmoersarpad acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT lehmkuhlulrike acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT bachmannchristianj acomparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT jaitecharlotte comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT kappelviola comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT nappadriane comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT sommermarcus comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT diederichsgerd comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT weschkebernhard comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT sporsbirgit comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT vonmoersarpad comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT lehmkuhlulrike comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram
AT bachmannchristianj comparisonstudyofanxietyinchildrenundergoingbrainmrivsadultsundergoingbrainmrivschildrenundergoinganelectroencephalogram