Department of Food and Nutrition, P.O. Box 66, 00014 University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Faculty of Social Sciences, P.O. Box 54, 00014 University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2019 Mar 20;16(1):28. doi: 10.1186/s12966-019-0791-8.
Emotional eating (i.e. eating in response to negative emotions) has been suggested to be one mechanism linking depression and subsequent development of obesity. However, studies have rarely examined this mediation effect in a prospective setting and its dependence on other factors linked to stress and its management. We used a population-based prospective cohort of adults and aimed to examine 1) whether emotional eating mediated the associations between depression and 7-year change in body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC), and 2) whether gender, age, night sleep duration or physical activity moderated these associations.
Participants were Finnish 25- to 74-year-olds who attended the DILGOM study at baseline in 2007 and follow-up in 2014. At baseline (n = 5024), height, weight and WC were measured in a health examination. At follow-up (n = 3735), height, weight and WC were based on measured or self-reported information. Depression (Center for Epidemiological Studies - Depression Scale), emotional eating (Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire-R18), physical activity and night sleep duration were self-reported. Age- and gender-adjusted structural equation models with full information maximum likelihood estimator were used in the analyses.
Depression and emotional eating were positively associated and they both predicted higher 7-year increase in BMI (R = 0.048) and WC (R = 0.045). The effects of depression on change in BMI and WC were mediated by emotional eating. Night sleep duration moderated the associations of emotional eating, while age moderated the associations of depression. More specifically, emotional eating predicted higher BMI (P = 0.007 for the interaction) and WC (P = 0.026, respectively) gain in shorter sleepers (7 h or less), but not in longer sleepers (9 h or more). Depression predicted higher BMI (P < 0.001 for the interaction) and WC (P = 0.065, respectively) increase in younger participants, but not in older participants.
Our findings offer support for the hypothesis that emotional eating is one behavioural mechanism between depression and development of obesity and abdominal obesity. Moreover, adults with a combination of shorter night sleep duration and higher emotional eating may be particularly vulnerable to weight gain. Future research should examine the clinical significance of our observations by tailoring weight management programs according to these characteristics.
情绪性进食(即对负面情绪的进食反应)被认为是将抑郁与随后肥胖发展联系起来的一种机制。然而,研究很少在前瞻性研究中检验这种中介效应,也很少检验其对与压力及其管理相关的其他因素的依赖性。我们使用了基于人群的前瞻性成年人队列,旨在检验 1)情绪性进食是否在抑郁与 7 年内体重指数(BMI)和腰围(WC)变化之间的关联中起中介作用,以及 2)性别、年龄、夜间睡眠时间或体力活动是否调节这些关联。
参与者为参加 2007 年 DILGOM 研究基线和 2014 年随访的芬兰 25 至 74 岁成年人。在基线(n=5024)时,在健康检查中测量身高、体重和 WC。在随访(n=3735)时,身高、体重和 WC 基于测量或自我报告的信息。抑郁(流行病学研究中心抑郁量表)、情绪性进食(三因素饮食问卷-R18)、体力活动和夜间睡眠时间均为自我报告。在分析中使用了全信息极大似然估计的年龄和性别调整结构方程模型。
抑郁和情绪性进食呈正相关,且两者均预测 BMI(R=0.048)和 WC(R=0.045)在 7 年内的增长。抑郁对 BMI 和 WC 变化的影响是通过情绪性进食来介导的。夜间睡眠时间调节了情绪性进食的关联,而年龄调节了抑郁的关联。更具体地说,情绪性进食预测睡眠较短(7 小时或更少)者 BMI(P=0.007 交互作用)和 WC(P=0.026,分别)的增长,但对睡眠较长(9 小时或更多)者没有影响。抑郁预测年龄较小(P<0.001 交互作用)者 BMI(P<0.001)和 WC(P=0.065,分别)的增加,但对年龄较大者没有影响。
我们的研究结果支持这样的假设,即情绪性进食是抑郁与肥胖和腹型肥胖发展之间的一种行为机制。此外,睡眠较短和情绪性进食较高的成年人可能特别容易体重增加。未来的研究应根据这些特征调整体重管理计划,以检验我们观察结果的临床意义。