Department of Nutritional Science, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.
Appetite. 2021 Aug 1;163:105236. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2021.105236. Epub 2021 Mar 31.
Childhood loss of control (LOC)-eating, the perceived inability to stop or control eating, is associated with increased risk for binge-eating disorder and obesity. However, the correlates of LOC-eating in childhood remain unclear. A secondary analysis of 177, 7-12-year-old children from five laboratory feeding studies was performed to investigate potential family (e.g., frequency of meals together, feeding practices), parental (e.g., education, weight status), and child (e.g., weight status, appetite traits) correlates of LOC-eating. Association rules mining (ARM), a data-driven approach, was used to examine all characteristics that were common across studies to identify which were associated with LOC-eating. Results showed LOC-eating was characterized by a combination of child appetitive behaviors and parental feeding practices. In particular, LOC-eating was associated with low parental pressure to eat in combination with a high propensity to want to eat all the time and frequent refusal or dislike of novel foods. This pattern of both food approach (i.e., wanting to eat all the time) and avoidant behaviors (i.e., food fussiness) highlights the need for more research to characterize the complex patterns of appetitive traits associated with LOC-eating. In contrast, the absence of LOC-eating was associated with a low propensity to want to eat all the time, greater family income, and infrequent emotional overeating. Therefore, propensity to want to eat all the time, a single question from the Children's Eating Behavior Questionnaire, characterized both the presence and absence of LOC-eating, highlighting the need for more research to determine if this question captures clinically relevant individual differences. Future studies addressing these questions will advance our understanding of pediatric LOC-eating and may lead to interventions to reduce risk for more severe eating disorder symptomology.
儿童期失控性进食(LOC),即无法停止或控制进食的感觉,与暴食症和肥胖的风险增加有关。然而,儿童期 LOC 进食的相关因素仍不清楚。对五项实验室喂养研究的 177 名 7-12 岁儿童的二次分析,旨在研究潜在的家庭(例如,一起用餐的频率、喂养方式)、父母(例如,教育程度、体重状况)和儿童(例如,体重状况、食欲特征)与 LOC 进食相关的因素。关联规则挖掘(ARM),一种数据驱动的方法,用于检查所有在研究中都常见的特征,以确定哪些与 LOC 进食相关。结果表明,LOC 进食的特点是儿童食欲行为和父母喂养方式的结合。特别是,LOC 进食与父母低进食压力相结合,儿童始终想吃东西的强烈愿望,以及经常拒绝或不喜欢新食物有关。这种既想吃东西(即总是想吃东西)又避免行为(即对食物挑剔)的模式突出了需要更多的研究来描述与 LOC 进食相关的食欲特征的复杂模式。相比之下,不存在 LOC 进食与始终想吃东西的强烈愿望较低、家庭收入较高和情绪性暴食不频繁有关。因此,始终想吃东西的强烈愿望,即儿童饮食行为问卷中的一个单一问题,既可以描述存在也可以描述不存在 LOC 进食的情况,突出了需要更多的研究来确定这个问题是否可以捕捉到与临床相关的个体差异。解决这些问题的未来研究将有助于我们理解儿童期 LOC 进食,并可能导致采取干预措施来降低更严重的饮食失调症状的风险。