Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust (CPFT), Cambridge, UK.
J Gambl Stud. 2017 Sep;33(3):783-793. doi: 10.1007/s10899-016-9647-1.
Excessive calorie intake constitutes a global public health concern, due to its associated range of untoward outcomes. Gambling is commonplace and gambling disorder is now considered a behavioral addiction in DSM-5. The relationships between calorie intake, gambling, and other types of putatively addictive and impulsive behaviors have received virtually no research attention. Two-hundred twenty-five young adults who gamble were recruited from two Mid-Western university communities in the United States using media advertisements. Dietary intake over the preceding year was quantified using the Dietary Fat and Free Sugar Short questionnaire (DFS). Clinician rating scales, questionnaires, and cognitive tests germane to impulsivity were completed. Relationships between dietary fat/sugar intake and gambling behaviors, as well as other measures of psychopathology and cognition germane to addiction, were evaluated using correlational analyses controlling for multiple comparisons. Greater dietary fat and sugar intake were associated with lower educational levels and with male gender. Controlling for these variables, higher dietary fat and sugar intake were correlated significantly with worse gambling pathology and anxiety scores. Dietary sugar intake was also significantly associated with higher depressive scores, more alcohol intake, lower self-esteem, and with greater risk of having one or more mental disorders in general. Dietary intake did not correlate significantly with ADHD symptoms, presence of one or more impulse control disorders, Barratt impulsiveness, or cognitive functioning. These data suggest a particularly strong relationship between fat/sugar intake and symptoms of gambling pathology, but not most other forms of impulsivity and behavioral addiction (excepting alcohol intake). Providing education about healthy diet may be especially valuable in gamblers and in community settings where gambling advertisements feature prominently. Future work should explore the mediating mechanisms between calorie intake and gambling symptoms, such as whether this could be driven by environmental factors (e.g. advertising) or common dysfunction of brain reward pathways.
摄入过多卡路里会对全球公共健康造成影响,因为这会导致一系列不良后果。赌博是很常见的,而赌博障碍现在被认为是 DSM-5 中的一种行为成瘾。卡路里摄入、赌博和其他类型的所谓成瘾和冲动行为之间的关系几乎没有得到研究关注。我们通过媒体广告,从美国中西部的两个大学社区招募了 225 名有赌博行为的年轻人。使用膳食脂肪和游离糖短问卷 (DFS) 来量化过去一年的饮食摄入。临床医生评估量表、问卷和与冲动相关的认知测试也同时完成。通过控制多重比较,使用相关性分析评估了饮食中脂肪/糖的摄入与赌博行为以及与成瘾相关的其他精神病理学和认知测量之间的关系。较高的饮食脂肪和糖摄入与较低的教育水平和男性性别有关。在控制这些变量的情况下,较高的饮食脂肪和糖摄入与更严重的赌博病理学和焦虑评分显著相关。饮食中糖的摄入也与更高的抑郁评分、更多的酒精摄入、更低的自尊心以及更普遍存在一种或多种精神障碍的风险显著相关。饮食摄入与 ADHD 症状、存在一种或多种冲动控制障碍、Barratt 冲动性或认知功能无显著相关性。这些数据表明,脂肪/糖摄入与赌博病理学症状之间存在特别强的关系,但与大多数其他形式的冲动和行为成瘾(除了酒精摄入)无关。提供有关健康饮食的教育可能对赌徒和赌博广告突出的社区环境特别有价值。未来的研究应该探索卡路里摄入和赌博症状之间的中介机制,例如,这是否可以由环境因素(例如广告)或大脑奖励途径的共同功能障碍驱动。