Psychoemotional features of a doubtful disorder: functional dyspepsia

J Med Life. 2012 Sep 15;5(3):260-76. Epub 2012 Sep 25.

Abstract

Objective: To delineate the psychological profile of individuals prone to FD-like symptoms (FDLS).

Method: A triple questionnaire of 614 items (including psychological and medical ones) was given to 10192 respondents, the results were analyzed by means of Cronbach alpha, and Chi square test, together with an ad-hoc designed method that implied ranking and outliers detecting.

Results and conclusions: FDLS appears to be an accompanying feature of many (if not most) human emotions and are more frequent in anxious, timid, pessimistic, discontent, irascible, tense, success-doubting, unexpected-dreading individuals, bothered by persistent thoughts and tormented by the professional requirements and the lack of time. A higher degree of specificity might have: chiefly fear of failure, susceptibility, and tension, secondarily emotivity, fear of unpredictable events, sense of insufficient time, preoccupation with authority factors, and tendency to endure unacceptable situations, and also faulty patience and lack of punctuality. Rumination appears to be the psychological tendency most strongly associated with FD. Nocturnal epigastric pain seems to indicate a submissive nature but a rather responsibilities-free childhood, while early satiety is associated with inclination to work and responsibility and preoccupation with self-image. The superposition of FD symptoms with biliary and esophageal symptoms cast a doubt over the distinctness and even the materiality of the various functional digestive disorders.

Keywords: personality inventory; psychological predisposition to disease; psychological profile.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Chi-Square Distribution
  • Dyspepsia / psychology*
  • Emotions*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Odds Ratio
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Uncertainty