Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2021 Aug 30;110:110295. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110295. Epub 2021 Feb 28.
Compulsive eating is a common symptom of different conditions, including obesity, binge eating disorder and bulimia. One hypothesis is that contemporary food products promote compulsive eating via addiction-like mechanisms. However, what is the addictive substance in food, and what is the phenotypic overlap between obesity / eating disorders and addictions are questions that remain unresolved. In this review, we applied a multilevel framework of addiction, which encompasses the 'drug' (certain foods), the person's mindset, and the context, to improve understanding of compulsive eating. Specifically, we reviewed evidence on the addictive properties of specific foods, the neurocognitive systems that control dietary choices, and their interaction with physical, emotional and social contexts. We focused on different target groups to illustrate distinct aspects of the proposed framework: the impact of food and contextual factors were examined across a continuum, with most studies conducted on healthy participants and subclinical populations, whereas the review of neurocognitive aspects focused on clinical groups in which the alterations linked to addictive and compulsive eating are particularly visible. The reviewed evidence suggest that macronutrient composition and level of processing are associated with the addictive properties of food; there are overlapping neuroadaptations in reward and decision-making circuits across compulsive eating conditions; and there are physical and social contexts that fuel compulsive eating by exploiting reward mechanisms and their interaction with emotions. We conclude that a biopsychosocial model that integrates food, neurobiology and context can provide a better understanding of compulsive eating manifestations in a transdiagnostic framework.
强迫性进食是肥胖症、暴食症和贪食症等不同病症的常见症状。有一种假说认为,现代食品通过类似成瘾的机制促进了强迫性进食。然而,食物中的成瘾物质是什么,以及肥胖症/饮食障碍和成瘾之间的表型重叠是什么,这些问题仍然没有得到解决。在这篇综述中,我们应用了一个成瘾的多层次框架,该框架包含了“药物”(某些食物)、人的心态和环境,以增进对强迫性进食的理解。具体来说,我们回顾了特定食物的成瘾特性、控制饮食选择的神经认知系统及其与身体、情感和社会环境的相互作用的证据。我们关注不同的目标群体,以说明所提出框架的不同方面:在一个连续体上检查了食物和环境因素的影响,大多数研究是在健康参与者和亚临床人群中进行的,而对神经认知方面的审查则侧重于临床人群,在这些人群中,与成瘾和强迫性进食相关的改变特别明显。综述的证据表明,宏量营养素组成和加工水平与食物的成瘾特性有关;在强迫性进食的情况下,奖励和决策回路存在重叠的神经适应;以及存在利用奖励机制及其与情绪的相互作用来助长强迫性进食的身体和社会环境。我们得出结论,一个整合食物、神经生物学和环境的生物心理社会模型可以在跨诊断框架中更好地理解强迫性进食的表现。