情绪化进食
心理学
焦虑
功能磁共振成像
压力源
临床心理学
发展心理学
内科学
精神科
医学
进食行为
肥胖
神经科学
作者
Rose Seoyoung Chang,Hilâl Cerit,Taryn Hye,E. Leighton Durham,Harlyn Aizley,Sarah Boukezzi,Florina Haimovici,Jill M. Goldstein,Daniel G. Dillon,Diego A. Pizzagalli,Laura M. Holsen
出处
期刊:Appetite
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2022-01-01
卷期号:168: 105707-105707
被引量:12
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.appet.2021.105707
摘要
Emotional eating has emerged as a contributing factor to overeating, potentially leading to obesity or disordered eating behaviors. However, the underlying biological mechanisms related to emotional eating remain unclear. The present study examined emotional, hormonal, and neural alterations elicited by an acute laboratory stressor in individuals with and without emotional eating. Emotional (n = 13) and non-emotional eaters (n = 15) completed two main study visits, one week apart: one visit included a Stress version and the other a No-stress version of the Maastricht Acute Stress Task (MAST). Immediately pre- and post-MAST, blood was drawn for serum cortisol and participants rated their anxiety level. After the MAST, participants completed a Food Incentive Delay (FID) task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), followed by an ad libitum snack period. Emotional eaters exhibited elevated anxiety (p = 0.037) and cortisol (p = 0.001) in response to the Stress MAST. There were no changes in anxiety or cortisol among non-emotional eaters in response to the Stress MAST or in either group in response to the No-stress MAST. In response to the Stress MAST, emotional eaters exhibited reduced activation during anticipation of food reward in mesolimbic reward regions (caudate: p = 0.014, nucleus accumbens: p = 0.022, putamen: p = 0.013), compared to non-emotional eaters. Groups did not differ in snack consumption. These data indicate disrupted neuroendocrine and neural responsivity to psychosocial stress amongst otherwise-healthy emotional eaters, who demonstrated hyperactive HPA-axis response coupled with hypoactivation in reward circuitry. Differential responsivity to stress may represent a risk factor in the development of maladaptive eating behaviors.
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