Rajan T M, Menon V
Department of Psychiatry, Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research, Puducherry, India.
J Postgrad Med. 2017 Jul-Sep;63(3):182-190. doi: 10.4103/jpgm.JPGM_712_16.
Inconsistent evidence exists regarding the strength, direction, and moderators in the relationship between obesity and psychiatric disorders.
This study aims to summarize the evidence on the association between psychiatric illness and obesity with particular attention to the strength and direction of association and also the possible moderators in each postulated link.
Systematic electronic searches of MEDLINE through PubMed, ScienceDirect, PsycINFO, and Google Scholar were carried out from inception till October 2016. Generated abstracts were screened for eligibility to be included in the review. Study designs that evaluated the strength of relationship between obesity and psychiatric disorders were included in the study. Quality assessment of included studies was done using the Newcastle-Ottawa checklist tool.
From a total of 2424 search results, 21 eligible articles were identified and reviewed. These included studies on obesity and depression (n = 15), obesity and anxiety (four) and one each on obesity and personality disorders, eating disorder (ED), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and alcohol use. Maximal evidence existed for the association between depression and obesity with longitudinal studies demonstrating a bidirectional link between the two conditions. The odds ratios (ORs) were similar for developing depression in obesity (OR: 1.21-5.8) and vice versa (OR: 1.18-3.76) with a stronger association observed in women. For anxiety disorders, evidence was mostly cross-sectional, and associations were of modest magnitude (OR: 1.27-1.40). Among other disorders, obesity, and EDs appear to have a close link (OR: 4.5). Alcohol use appears to be a risk factor for obesity and not vice versa but only among women (OR: 3.84).
Obesity and depression have a significant and bidirectional association. Evidence is modest for anxiety disorders and inadequate for other psychiatric conditions. Gender appears to be an important mediator in these relationships.
关于肥胖与精神障碍之间关系的强度、方向及调节因素,现有证据并不一致。
本研究旨在总结精神疾病与肥胖之间关联的证据,尤其关注关联的强度和方向,以及每个假定联系中可能的调节因素。
从数据库建立至2016年10月,通过PubMed、ScienceDirect、PsycINFO和谷歌学术对MEDLINE进行系统的电子检索。对生成的摘要进行筛选,以确定是否符合纳入综述的条件。纳入评估肥胖与精神障碍之间关系强度的研究设计。使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华清单工具对纳入研究进行质量评估。
在总共2424条检索结果中,确定并审查了21篇符合条件的文章。这些研究包括肥胖与抑郁症(n = 15)、肥胖与焦虑症(4篇),以及各1篇关于肥胖与人格障碍、饮食失调(ED)、注意力缺陷多动障碍和酒精使用的研究。抑郁症与肥胖之间关联的证据最为充分,纵向研究表明这两种情况之间存在双向联系。肥胖者患抑郁症的比值比(OR)(OR:1.21 - 5.8)与抑郁症患者患肥胖症的比值比(OR:1.18 - 3.76)相似,女性中的关联更强。对于焦虑症,证据大多为横断面研究,关联程度适中(OR:1.27 - 1.40)。在其他疾病中,肥胖与饮食失调似乎有密切联系(OR:4.5)。酒精使用似乎是肥胖的一个危险因素,反之则不然,但仅在女性中如此(OR:3.84)。
肥胖与抑郁症存在显著的双向关联。焦虑症的证据适中,其他精神疾病的证据不足。性别似乎是这些关系中的一个重要调节因素。