Center for Obesity Research and Education, College of Public Health, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Center for Weight and Eating Disorders, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Surg Obes Relat Dis. 2019 Apr;15(4):650-655. doi: 10.1016/j.soard.2019.01.029. Epub 2019 Feb 23.
Outcomes of bariatric surgery, while frequently impressive, are not universal and vary between patients and across surgical procedures. Between 20% and 30% of patients experience suboptimal weight loss or significant weight regain within the first few postoperative years. The reasons for this are not fully understood, but likely involve both physiologic processes, behavioral factors, and psychological characteristics. Evidence suggests that preoperative psychosocial status and functioning can contribute to suboptimal weight losses and/or postoperative psychosocial distress. Much of this work has focused on the presence of recognized psychiatric diagnoses and with particular emphasis on mood disorders as well as binge eating disorder. Several studies have suggested that the presence of preoperative psychopathology is associated with suboptimal weight losses, postoperative complications, and less positive psychosocial outcomes. Contemporary psychological theory suggests that it may be shared features across diagnoses, rather than a discrete diagnosis, that better characterizes psychopathology. Mood and substance use disorders as well as binge eating disorder, share common features of impulsivity, although clinicians and researchers often use complementary, yet different terms, such as emotional dysregulation or disinhibition (i.e., loss of control over eating, as applied to food intake), to describe the phenomenon. Impulse control is a central factor in eating behavior and extreme obesity. It also may contribute to the experience of suboptimal outcomes after bariatric surgery, including smaller than expected weight loss and psychosocial distress. This paper reviews the literature in these areas of research and articulates a direction for future studies of these complex relationships among persons with extreme obesity.
减重手术的结果虽然令人印象深刻,但并不普遍,而且在患者之间和手术方式之间存在差异。有 20%至 30%的患者在术后几年内经历了不理想的体重减轻或明显的体重反弹。其原因尚未完全阐明,但可能涉及生理过程、行为因素和心理特征。有证据表明,术前心理社会状况和功能可能导致不理想的体重减轻和/或术后心理困扰。这项工作的很大一部分都集中在公认的精神科诊断上,特别是强调情绪障碍和暴食障碍。几项研究表明,术前精神病理学的存在与不理想的体重减轻、术后并发症和较差的心理社会结果有关。当代心理理论表明,更好地描述精神病理学的可能是跨诊断的共同特征,而不是离散的诊断。心境和物质使用障碍以及暴食障碍都有冲动的共同特征,尽管临床医生和研究人员通常使用互补但不同的术语,如情绪失调或抑制障碍(即对进食的控制丧失)来描述这种现象。冲动控制是饮食行为和极度肥胖的一个核心因素。它也可能导致减重手术后出现不理想的结果,包括预期的体重减轻较小和心理社会困扰。本文综述了这些研究领域的文献,并为未来研究这些极度肥胖人群中复杂关系指明了方向。