Chesler Betty E
ScientificWorldJournal. 2012;2012:365961. doi: 10.1100/2012/365961. Epub 2012 Apr 1.
Empirical investigations implicate emotional eating (EE) in dysfunctional eating behavior such as uncontrolled overeating and insufficient weight loss following bariatric surgery. They demonstrate that EE may be a conscious or reflexive behavior motivated by multiple negative emotions and/or feelings of distress about loss-of-control eating. EE, however, has not been targeted in pre- or postoperative interventions or examined as an explanatory construct for failed treatment of dysfunctional eating. Three cases suggest that cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) might alleviate EE. One describes treatment for distress provoked by loss-of-control eating. The first of two others, associated with negative emotions/life situations, link treatment of a super-super-preoperative obese individual's reflexive EE with 52% excess BMI (body mass index) loss maintained for the past year, 64 months after surgery. The second relates treatment of conscious/reflexive EE with 84.52% excess BMI loss 53 months after surgery. Implications for research and treatment are discussed.
实证研究表明,情绪化进食(EE)与功能失调的饮食行为有关,如无节制的暴饮暴食和减肥手术后体重减轻不足。研究表明,EE可能是一种有意识或反射性的行为,由多种负面情绪和/或对失控饮食的痛苦感所驱动。然而,EE在术前或术后干预中并未成为目标,也未被作为功能失调饮食治疗失败的一种解释性结构进行研究。三个案例表明,认知行为疗法(CBT)可能会减轻EE。一个案例描述了针对失控饮食引发的痛苦的治疗。另外两个案例中的第一个,与负面情绪/生活状况相关,将一名超级术前肥胖个体的反射性EE治疗与术后64个月过去一年保持的超过52%的体重指数(BMI)损失联系起来。第二个案例涉及术后53个月有意识/反射性EE治疗与超过84.52%的BMI损失。文中还讨论了对研究和治疗的启示。