Segura-Garcia Cristina, Caroleo Mariarita, Rania Marianna, Barbuto Elvira, Sinopoli Flora, Aloi Matteo, Arturi Franco, De Fazio Pasquale
Department of Health Sciences, University Magna Graecia of Catanzaro, Catanzaro, Italy.
Department of Health Sciences, University Magna Graecia of Catanzaro, Catanzaro, Italy.
J Affect Disord. 2017 Jan 15;208:424-430. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2016.11.005. Epub 2016 Nov 10.
Obesity is not a mental disorder, yet DSM-5 recognizes a strong association between obesity and psychiatric syndromes. Disorders within the Bipolar Spectrum (BSD) and Binge Eating Disorder (BED) are the most frequent psychiatric disorders among obese patients. The aim of this research is to investigate the psychopathological differences and the distinctive eating behaviors that accompany these comorbidities in obese patients.
One hundred and nineteen obese patients (40 males; 79 females) underwent psychological evaluation and psychiatric interview, and a dietitian evaluated their eating habits. Patients were divided into four groups according to comorbidities, and comparisons were run accordingly.
Forty-one percent of participants presented BED+BSD comorbidity (Group 1), 21% BED (Group 2) and 8% BSD (Group 3); only 29% obese participants had no comorbidity (Group 4). Female gender was overrepresented among Groups 1 and 2. BSD diagnosis varied according to comorbidities: Type II Bipolar Disorder and Other Specified and Related Bipolar Disorder (OSR BD) were more frequent in Group 1 and Type I Bipolar Disorder in Group 3. A trend of decreasing severity in eating behaviors and psychopathology was evident according to comorbidities (Group 1=Group2>Group3>Group 4).
Limitations include the small sample size and the cross-sectional design of the study.
BED and BSD are frequent comorbidities in obesity. Type II Bipolar Disorder and OSR BD are more frequent in the group with double comorbidity. The double comorbidity seems associated to more severe eating behaviors and psychopathology. Distinctive pathological eating behaviors could be considered as warning signals, symptomatic of psychiatric comorbidities in Obesity.
肥胖并非精神障碍,但《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM - 5)认可肥胖与精神综合征之间存在紧密关联。双相谱系障碍(BSD)和暴食症(BED)是肥胖患者中最常见的精神疾病。本研究旨在调查肥胖患者中这些共病所伴随的心理病理学差异及独特的饮食行为。
119名肥胖患者(40名男性;79名女性)接受了心理评估和精神科访谈,一名营养师评估了他们的饮食习惯。患者根据共病情况分为四组,并据此进行比较。
41%的参与者存在BED + BSD共病(第1组),21%为BED(第2组),8%为BSD(第3组);仅有29%的肥胖参与者无共病(第4组)。第1组和第2组中女性比例过高。BSD诊断因共病情况而异:双相情感障碍II型和其他特定及相关双相障碍(OSR BD)在第1组中更为常见,双相情感障碍I型在第3组中更为常见。根据共病情况,饮食行为和心理病理学的严重程度呈下降趋势(第1组 = 第2组 > 第3组 > 第4组)。
局限性包括样本量小以及研究的横断面设计。
BED和BSD是肥胖中常见的共病。双相情感障碍II型和OSR BD在双重共病组中更为常见。双重共病似乎与更严重的饮食行为和心理病理学相关。独特的病理性饮食行为可被视为肥胖中精神共病的警示信号和症状表现。