Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
Int J Eat Disord. 2014 May;47(4):376-84. doi: 10.1002/eat.22204. Epub 2013 Oct 12.
The primary purpose of this study was to examine neurobiological underpinnings of reward processing that may relate to treatment outcome for binge-eating disorder (BED).
Prior to starting treatment, 19 obese persons seeking treatment for BED performed a monetary incentive delay task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Analyses examined how the neural correlates of reward processing related to binge-eating status after 4-months of treatment.
Ten individuals continued to report binge-eating (BEpost-tx ) following treatment and 9 individuals did not (NBEpost-tx ). The groups did not differ in body mass index. The BEpost-tx group relative to the NBEpost-tx group showed diminished recruitment of the ventral striatum and the inferior frontal gyrus during the anticipatory phase of reward processing and reduced activity in the medial prefrontal cortex during the outcome phase of reward processing.
These results link brain reward circuitry to treatment outcome in BED and suggest that specific brain regions underlying reward processing may represent important therapeutic targets in BED.
本研究的主要目的是探讨与暴食障碍(BED)治疗结果相关的奖励处理的神经生物学基础。
在开始治疗之前,19 名寻求暴食障碍治疗的肥胖患者在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)期间进行了金钱奖励延迟任务。分析检查了奖励处理的神经相关性如何与治疗 4 个月后的暴食状态相关。
10 个人在治疗后继续报告暴食(BEpost-tx),而 9 个人没有(NBEpost-tx)。BEpost-tx 组和 NBEpost-tx 组在体重指数方面没有差异。与 NBEpost-tx 组相比,BEpost-tx 组在奖励处理的预期阶段,腹侧纹状体和下额叶回的招募减少,在奖励处理的结果阶段,内侧前额叶皮层的活动减少。
这些结果将大脑奖励回路与 BED 的治疗结果联系起来,并表明奖励处理的特定大脑区域可能是 BED 的重要治疗靶点。