Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824; email:
Department of Psychology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada 89154; email:
Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 2017 May 8;13:183-207. doi: 10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-032816-045309. Epub 2017 Mar 16.
Eating disorders are highly sexually differentiated disorders that exhibit a female predominance in risk. Most theories focus on psychosocial explanations to the exclusion of biological/genetic influences. The purpose of this descriptive review is to evaluate evidence from animal and human studies in support of gonadal hormone effects on sex differences in binge eating. Although research is in its nascent stages, findings suggest that increased prenatal testosterone exposure in males appears to protect against binge eating. Although pubertal testosterone may exert additional protective effects, the prenatal period is likely critical for the decreased risk observed in males. By contrast, studies indicate that, in females, it is the lack of prenatal testosterone coupled with the organizational effects of pubertal ovarian hormones that may lead to increased binge eating. Finally, twin data suggest that changes in genetic risk may underlie these hormone influences on sex differences across development.
进食障碍是高度性别分化的疾病,其风险表现出女性优势。大多数理论都侧重于社会心理方面的解释,而排除了生物/遗传因素的影响。本描述性综述的目的是评估来自动物和人类研究的证据,以支持性腺激素对暴食行为中性别差异的影响。尽管研究还处于起步阶段,但研究结果表明,男性胎儿期暴露于较高水平的睾酮似乎可以预防暴食行为。虽然青春期的睾酮可能会产生额外的保护作用,但胎儿期可能是男性观察到的风险降低的关键时期。相比之下,研究表明,在女性中,缺乏胎儿期的睾酮,加上青春期卵巢激素的组织作用,可能导致暴食行为增加。最后,双胞胎数据表明,遗传风险的变化可能是这些激素对整个发育过程中性别差异影响的基础。