Center for Weight and Eating Disorders, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, 3535 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Curr Obes Rep. 2014 Mar 1;3(1):127-36. doi: 10.1007/s13679-013-0080-9.
Three mental health problems commonly associated with obesity are major depression, binge eating disorder (BED), and Night Eating Syndrome (NES). Evidence from both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies support independent relationships between obesity and depression, and between obesity and binge eating. These problems are most prevalent in severely obese individuals (Class III obesity; a body mass index (BMI) of >40kgm(2)), many of whom seek bariatric surgery, and we briefly review whether the presence of pre-operative depression, BED or NES affects post-operative outcomes. Historically depressed individuals have been screened out of weight loss trials due to concerns of worsening mood with weight loss. Such practices have precluded the development of effective treatments for depressed, obese individuals, leaving large numbers of people without appropriate care. We present recent advances in this area, and attempt to answer whether depressed individuals can lose clinically significant amounts of weight, show improvements in mood, and adhere to the demands of a weight loss intervention.
三种常见的与肥胖相关的心理健康问题是重度抑郁症、暴食症(BED)和夜间进食综合征(NES)。横断面和纵向研究的证据都支持肥胖与抑郁之间以及肥胖与暴食之间的独立关系。这些问题在重度肥胖者(三级肥胖;身体质量指数(BMI)>40kgm(2))中最为普遍,其中许多人寻求减肥手术,我们简要回顾了术前抑郁、暴食症或夜间进食综合征的存在是否会影响术后结果。由于担心体重减轻会导致情绪恶化,历史上患有抑郁症的人被排除在减肥试验之外。这种做法阻碍了针对抑郁肥胖者的有效治疗方法的发展,导致大量人得不到适当的治疗。我们介绍了这一领域的最新进展,并试图回答抑郁者是否可以减轻有临床意义的体重、改善情绪并坚持减肥干预的要求。