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冲动的大脑:正常体重成年人暴食行为的神经基础。

The impulsive brain: Neural underpinnings of binge eating behavior in normal-weight adults.

机构信息

Department of General Psychology, University of Padova, Padova, Italy.

IFB Adiposity Diseases, Leipzig University Medical Center, Leipzig, Germany; Department of Neurology, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.

出版信息

Appetite. 2019 May 1;136:33-49. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2018.12.043. Epub 2019 Jan 4.

Abstract

Converging evidence suggests that dysfunctional inhibitory control might be at the roots of overeating and binge eating disorder (BED). The majority of these results stems from studies on obese populations, however we hypothesized that potential prodromes might be evident also in non-clinical conditions, when binge eating episodes are present (without a diagnosis of BED) and a normal Body Mass Index is preserved. To explore this issue, brain activity of 42 normal weight individuals with and without binge eating episodes (21 binge eaters and 21 non-binge eaters, BE and non-BE respectively) was assessed by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during response inhibition tasks. We adopted a food-modified version of a go/no-go (GNG) and stop signal task (SST): these tasks investigate different aspects of inhibitory control (action restraint and cancellation) that have been rarely studied in the same individuals but that are known to involve different neural networks. In addition, impulsivity traits were assessed with self-report instruments. Despite similar behavioral performances, the two groups differed in trait impulsivity and brain activity. The fMRI results revealed differential engagement of fronto-striatal regions between the groups during the tasks. The BE group, compared to non-BE, showed lower activation of the right middle frontal gyrus (MFG) and Putamen during the GNG task, and higher activation of the left MFG during the SST. These findings provide evidence of a dissociation of the neural underpinnings of action restraint and cancellation in impulsive individuals. Moreover, they add support to the hypothesis that impulsivity may be a possible hallmark of binge eating behavior (in the absence of weight or full-blown eating disorders) and yield new insights on the role of regions typically involved in response inhibition and selection as possible substrates of impulsive eating.

摘要

越来越多的证据表明,抑制控制功能障碍可能是暴饮暴食和暴食障碍(BED)的根源。这些结果主要来自肥胖人群的研究,但我们假设,在非临床情况下,当存在暴饮暴食发作(没有 BED 诊断)且保持正常体重指数时,也可能出现潜在的前驱症状。为了探讨这个问题,我们通过功能磁共振成像(fMRI)评估了 42 名正常体重个体(有和没有暴饮暴食发作)的大脑活动,这些个体(分别为 21 名暴食者和 21 名非暴食者)在反应抑制任务期间进行了评估。我们采用了食物改良的 Go/No-Go(GNG)和停止信号任务(SST):这些任务研究了抑制控制的不同方面(行为抑制和取消),这些方面在同一人群中很少同时研究,但已知涉及不同的神经网络。此外,还使用自我报告工具评估了冲动特质。尽管行为表现相似,但两组在特质冲动和大脑活动方面存在差异。fMRI 结果表明,两组在任务期间前额纹状体区域的活动不同。与非暴食者相比,暴食者在 GNG 任务中右额中回(MFG)和壳核的激活较低,而在 SST 中左 MFG 的激活较高。这些发现为冲动个体的行为抑制和取消的神经基础的分离提供了证据。此外,它们为冲动可能是暴饮暴食行为(在没有体重或全面进食障碍的情况下)的一个可能标志的假设提供了支持,并对反应抑制和选择中通常涉及的区域作为冲动性进食的可能基质的作用提供了新的见解。

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