Abstract

Background: In asthma and allergic rhinitis, beliefs about what triggers allergic reactions often do not match objective allergy tests. This may be due to insensitivity for expectancy violations as a result of holding trigger beliefs based on conceptual relationships among triggers. In this laboratory experiment, we aimed to investigate how pre-existing beliefs and conceptual relationships among triggers interact with actual experience when learning differential symptom expectations.Methods: Healthy participants (N = 48) received information that allergic reactions were a result of specific sensitivities versus general allergic vulnerability. Next, they performed a trigger learning task using a differential conditioning paradigm: brief inhalation of CO2 enriched air was used to induce symptoms, while participants were led to believe that the symptoms came about as a result of inhaled allergens (conditioned stimuli, CS’s; CS+ followed by symptoms, CS- not followed by symptoms). CS+ and CS- stimuli either shared (e.g., birds-mammals) or did not share (e.g. birds-fungi) category membership. During Acquisition, participants reported symptom expectancy and symptom intensity for all triggers. During a Test 1 day later, participants rated symptom expectancies for old CS+/CS- triggers, for novel triggers within categories, and for exemplars of novel trigger categories. Data were analyzed using multilevel models.Findings: Only a subgroup of participants (n = 22) showed differences between CO2 and room air symptoms. In this group of responders, analysis of symptom expectancies during acquisition did not result in significant differential symptom CS+/CS- acquisition. A retention test 1 day later showed differential CS+/CS- symptom expectancies: When CS categories did not share category membership, specific sensitivity beliefs improved retention of CS+/CS- differentiation. However, when CS categories shared category membership, general vulnerability beliefs improved retention of CS+/CS- differentiation. Furthermore, participants showed some selectivity in generalization of symptom expectancies to novel categories, as symptom expectancies did not generalize to novel categories that were unrelated to CS+ or CS- categories. Generalization to novel categories was not affected by information about general vulnerability or specific sensitivities.Discussion: Pre-existing vulnerability beliefs and conceptual relationships between trigger categories influence differential symptom expectancies to allergic triggers.

Highlights

  • Asthma and allergic rhinitis are chronic conditions that are characterized by an allergic or hyperreactive response of the airways to a variety of triggers (Bousquet et al, 2012; Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), 2016). Because treatment for these conditions is currently not available, management strategies are suggested to reduce the manifestation of symptoms and increase clinical control (Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), 2016)

  • Individuals show a marked variation in the type and number of asthma triggers they identify, with a higher number of self-identified asthma triggers being associated with worse asthma outcomes, even when controlling for other measures of asthma severity (Ritz et al, 2006, 2016; Janssens and Harver, 2015)

  • Results of this study showed a variety of complexity of responses, ranging from phenomism to complex psychophysiological causal models, with more complex understanding of causal chains in asthma being associated with better treatment strategies

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Summary

Introduction

Asthma and allergic rhinitis are chronic conditions that are characterized by an allergic or hyperreactive response of the airways to a variety of triggers (Bousquet et al, 2012; Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), 2016) Because treatment for these conditions is currently not available, management strategies are suggested to reduce the manifestation of symptoms and increase clinical control (Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), 2016). In asthma and allergic rhinitis, beliefs about what triggers allergic reactions often do not match objective allergy tests This may be due to insensitivity for expectancy violations as a result of holding trigger beliefs based on conceptual relationships among triggers. Discussion: Pre-existing vulnerability beliefs and conceptual relationships between trigger categories influence differential symptom expectancies to allergic triggers

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