Meta-analysis shows reduced stress-induced autonomic responses in people with multiple sclerosis compared to controls
This meta-analysis evaluates fourteen studies investigating autonomic responses to emotional or stress-related stimuli in people with multiple sclerosis and controls. The review focuses on primary outcomes including heart rate, heart rate variability, and blood pressure, alongside secondary outcomes like electrodermal activity and pupil response. The setting of these studies was not reported in the source data.
Between-group analysis revealed a large reduction in stress-induced autonomic responses in people with multiple sclerosis compared to controls, with an effect size of d = -1.21. Within-group analysis in the multiple sclerosis population showed a moderate increase in autonomic responsiveness, with an effect size of d = 0.71 and a p-value of .079. The authors note that these autonomic changes are possibly linked to central lesions affecting stress-regulation networks.
The review does not report adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability data. Funding sources and conflicts of interest were not reported. The authors caution against inferring causation from association and against overstate clinical outcomes derived from surrogate markers. Practice relevance supports using autonomic reactivity as a potential physiological marker of emotional and functional impairment in multiple sclerosis.