Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, 107B Psychology Building, East Lansing, MI 48824-1116, USA.
J Abnorm Psychol. 2011 Feb;120(1):119-28. doi: 10.1037/a0020895.
Dietary restraint is a prospective risk factor for the development of binge eating and bulimia nervosa. Although many women engage in dietary restraint, relatively few develop binge eating. Dietary restraint may increase susceptibility for binge eating only in individuals who are at genetic risk. Specifically, dietary restraint may be a behavioral exposure factor that activates genetic predispositions for binge eating. We investigated this possibility in 1,678 young adolescent and adult same-sex female twins from the Minnesota Twin Family Study and the Michigan State University Twin Registry. Twin moderation models were used to examine whether levels of dietary restraint moderate genetic and environmental influences on binge eating. Results indicated that genetic and nonshared environmental factors for binge eating increased at higher levels of dietary restraint. These effects were present after controlling for age, body mass index, and genetic and environmental overlap among dietary restraint and binge eating. Results suggest that dietary restraint may be most important for individuals at genetic risk for binge eating and that the combination of these factors could enhance individual differences in risk for binge eating.
饮食克制是暴食症和神经性贪食症发展的前瞻性风险因素。尽管许多女性会进行饮食克制,但只有少数人会发展为暴食。饮食克制可能只会增加那些具有遗传风险的人易患暴食的可能性。具体来说,饮食克制可能是一种行为暴露因素,会激活暴食的遗传倾向。我们在明尼苏达州双胞胎家庭研究和密歇根州立大学双胞胎登记处的 1678 名年轻青少年和成年同性别女性双胞胎中研究了这种可能性。使用双胞胎调节模型来检验饮食克制是否会调节暴食的遗传和环境影响。结果表明,在更高水平的饮食克制下,暴食的遗传和非共享环境因素会增加。在控制年龄、体重指数以及饮食克制和暴食之间的遗传和环境重叠后,这些影响仍然存在。结果表明,饮食克制对于有暴食遗传风险的个体可能最为重要,并且这些因素的组合可能会增强暴食风险的个体差异。