Alexithymia profiles and depression, anxiety, and stress




Preece David A., Mehta Ashish, Petrova Kate, Sikka Pilleriin, Pemberton Ethan, Gross James J.

PublisherElsevier

2024

Journal of Affective Disorders

Journal of Affective Disorders

357

116

125

0165-0327

1573-2517

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.02.071

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.02.071

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/387004033



Background

Alexithymia is a multidimensional trait comprised of difficulties identifying feelings, difficulties describing feelings, and externally orientated thinking. It is regarded as an important risk factor for emotional disorders, but there are presently limited data on each specific facet of alexithymia, or the extent to which deficits in processing negative emotions, positive emotions, or both, are important. In this study, we address these gaps by using the Perth Alexithymia Questionnaire (PAQ) to comprehensively examine the relationships between alexithymia and depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms.

Methods

University students (N = 1250) completed the PAQ and the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales-21. Pearson correlations, hierarchical regressions, and latent profile analysis were conducted.

Results

All facets of alexithymia, across both valence domains, were significantly correlated with depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms (r = 0.27–0.40). Regression analyses indicated that the alexithymia facets, together, could account for a significant 14.6 %–16.4 % of the variance in depression, anxiety, and stress. Difficulties identifying negative feelings and difficulties identifying positive feelings were the strongest unique predictors across all symptom categories. Our latent profile analysis extracted eight profiles, comprising different combinations of alexithymia facets and psychopathology symptoms, collectively highlighting the transdiagnostic relevance of alexithymia facets.

Limitations

Our study involved a student sample, and further work in clinical samples will be beneficial. Conclusions Our data indicate that all facets of alexithymia, across both valence domains, are relevant for understanding depression, anxiety, and stress. These findings demonstrate the value of facet-level and valence-specific alexithymia assessments, informing more comprehensive understanding and more targeted treatments of emotional disorder symptoms.


This research was supported by part funding of David A. Preece's academic salary by the Raine Medical Research Foundation, Brightspark Foundation, Charter Hall, and the University of Western Australia Cockell Bequest. This research was supported by part funding of Pilleriin Sikka's academic salary by the Finnish Cultural Foundation.


Last updated on 2024-28-11 at 12:10