The Influence of Personality on Health Complaints and Quality of Life in Women With Breast Implants

Juliënne A Berben*, Renée M L Miseré, Sander J Schop, René R W J van der Hulst

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A causal relation between systemic symptoms and breast implants is not established. Psychological factors, such as personality and psychological distress, are strongly associated with the development of medically unexplained symptoms. It could be hypothesized that psychological factors may be related to the development of breast implant illness (BII).

OBJECTIVES: This study was conducted to evaluate the correlation between self-reported health complaints, health- and breast-related Quality of Life (QoL), and personality, in women with cosmetic breast implants.

METHODS: Women who attended the plastic surgery outpatient clinic of Maastricht University Medical Center between October 2020 and October 2021 for reasons related to their implants and women recruited for one of our BII-studies during this period were invited to this study. Only women who underwent cosmetic breast augmentation were eligible. Participants completed a physical complaints score form and BREAST-Q, SF-36, EPQ-RSS questionnaires via an online survey.

RESULTS: In total, 201 women completed the questionnaires. Extroversion and social desirability were predominant personality traits in women with breast implants, followed by neuroticism. Relatively high levels of neuroticism were found compared to normative data. Neuroticism correlated significantly with health status and breast-related QoL. Health related QoL had the strongest correlation with neuroticism (β= -3.94, β= -4.86 p <.001).

CONCLUSIONS: Personality can play a role in the development of complaints. High levels of neuroticism are seen in cosmetic surgery patients and are negatively correlated with subjective health and patient-reported outcomes in women with breast implants. Therefore, neuroticism may be a factor in the development of BII.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)245-252
Number of pages8
JournalAesthetic Surgery Journal
Volume43
Issue number2
Early online date8 Sept 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Feb 2023

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