Hildebrandt Britny A, Racine Sarah E, Keel Pamela K, Burt S Alexandra, Neale Michael, Boker Steven, Sisk Cheryl L, Klump Kelly L
Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Int J Eat Disord. 2015 Jul;48(5):477-86. doi: 10.1002/eat.22326. Epub 2014 Jun 26.
Previous research has shown that fluctuations in ovarian hormones (i.e., estradiol and progesterone) predict the changes in binge eating and emotional eating across the menstrual cycle. However, the extent to which other eating disorder symptoms fluctuate across the menstrual cycle and are influenced by ovarian hormones remains largely unknown. This study sought to examine whether the levels of weight preoccupation vary across the menstrual cycle and whether the changes in ovarian hormones and/or other factors (i.e., emotional eating and negative affect) account for menstrual cycle fluctuations in this eating disorder phenotype.
For 45 consecutive days, 352 women (age, 15-25 years) provided daily ratings of weight preoccupation, negative affect, and emotional eating. Saliva samples were also collected on a daily basis and assayed for levels of estradiol and progesterone using enzyme immunoassay techniques.
Weight preoccupation varied significantly across the menstrual cycle, with the highest levels in the premenstrual and menstrual phases. However, ovarian hormones did not account for within-person changes in weight preoccupation across the menstrual cycle. Instead, the most significant predictor of menstrual cycle changes in weight preoccupation was the change in emotional eating.
Fluctuations in weight preoccupation across the menstrual cycle appear to be influenced primarily by emotional eating rather than ovarian hormones. Future research should continue to examine the relationships among ovarian hormones, weight preoccupation, emotional eating, and other core eating disorder symptoms (e.g., body dissatisfaction, compensatory behaviors) in an effort to more fully understand the role of these biological and behavioral factors for the full spectrum of eating pathology.
先前的研究表明,卵巢激素(即雌二醇和孕酮)的波动可预测整个月经周期中暴饮暴食和情绪化进食的变化。然而,其他饮食失调症状在月经周期中的波动程度以及受卵巢激素影响的程度在很大程度上仍不清楚。本研究旨在探讨对体重的过度关注程度在月经周期中是否存在差异,以及卵巢激素和/或其他因素(即情绪化进食和消极情绪)的变化是否能解释这种饮食失调表型在月经周期中的波动情况。
352名年龄在15至25岁之间的女性连续45天每天对体重过度关注、消极情绪和情绪化进食进行评分。每天还收集唾液样本,采用酶免疫分析技术检测雌二醇和孕酮水平。
对体重的过度关注在月经周期中存在显著差异,在经前期和月经期水平最高。然而,卵巢激素并不能解释月经周期中个体对体重过度关注的变化。相反,月经周期中对体重过度关注变化的最显著预测因素是情绪化进食的变化。
月经周期中对体重过度关注的波动似乎主要受情绪化进食而非卵巢激素的影响。未来的研究应继续探讨卵巢激素、对体重的过度关注、情绪化进食和其他核心饮食失调症状(如身体不满、代偿行为)之间的关系,以便更全面地了解这些生物学和行为因素在整个饮食病理学中的作用。