Department of Behavioral Health and Nutrition, University of Delaware.
Division of Epidemiology & Community Health, University of Minnesota.
Health Psychol. 2018 Mar;37(3):238-246. doi: 10.1037/hea0000547.
Cross-sectional studies suggest an association between weight cycling and psychological status. Although this is often interpreted as suggesting that weight cycles "cause" psychological distress, the relationship could be bidirectional. This study provides a prospective analysis of the bidirectional association between weight variability and psychological status over an 8-year period in overweight/obese adults with Type 2 diabetes.
Data were from the first 8 years of Look AHEAD, a randomized controlled trial comparing health outcomes in individuals with Type 2 diabetes assigned to an intensive lifestyle intervention designed to produce weight loss or a diabetes education and support control group. Psychological status (mental health, depressive symptoms, binge eating) was assessed via surveys and were examined in relation to weight variability at both baseline and year 8. Weight variability was derived from 8 possible annual measurements from participants who had a minimum of 3 consecutive body weight measurements (N = 4,774) and operationalized as the number of year-to-year cycles and the coefficient of variation across all available weight measurements.
Controlling for study group, higher baseline scores on mental health (Short Form-36 Mental Component Summary) and lower levels of depressive symptomatology (Beck Depression Inventory) and binge eating (Questionnaire on Eating and Weight Patterns) were associated with significantly less subsequent weight variability. The prospective association between weight variability and psychological status at year 8 was less robust.
These results suggest that the cross-sectional relationship between weight variability and psychological status is due primarily to poorer psychological function preceding greater weight instability. (PsycINFO Database Record
横断面研究表明体重波动与心理状态之间存在关联。尽管这通常被解释为体重波动“导致”心理困扰,但这种关系也可能是双向的。本研究对超重/肥胖 2 型糖尿病患者在 8 年内体重变异性与心理状态之间的双向关联进行了前瞻性分析。
数据来自 Look AHEAD 的前 8 年,这是一项随机对照试验,比较了 2 型糖尿病患者的健康结果,这些患者被分配到旨在减肥的强化生活方式干预组或糖尿病教育和支持对照组。心理状态(心理健康、抑郁症状、暴食)通过调查进行评估,并与基线和第 8 年的体重变异性相关。体重变异性由 8 个可能的年度测量值得出,参与者至少有 3 次连续体重测量值(N=4774),并通过每年的体重变化次数和所有可用体重测量值的变异系数来表示。
控制研究组后,心理健康(Short Form-36 心理健康成分综合评分)的基线得分较高,抑郁症状(贝克抑郁量表)和暴食(饮食和体重模式问卷)的水平较低,与随后的体重变异性显著降低相关。体重变异性与第 8 年心理状态的前瞻性关联不太可靠。
这些结果表明,体重变异性与心理状态之间的横断面关系主要是由于较差的心理功能在前,体重不稳定在后。(心理信息数据库记录)