Hagan M M, Moss D E
Department of Psychology, University of Texas at El Paso 79968-0553, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 1997 Dec;22(4):411-20. doi: 10.1002/(sici)1098-108x(199712)22:4<411::aid-eat6>3.0.co;2-p.
To test the hypothesis that experience with food restriction produces persistent binge eating. The Minnesota semistarvation experiment and studies of prisoners-of-war show that chronic food restriction produces dramatic changes in eating behavior (including binge eating) that endure decades after restriction has ceased. Bulimia nervosa patients who restrict also binge. Restriction may be a risk factor in the etiology of binge eating and bulimia.
Animals were subjected to four different patterns of 12-week restriction-refeeding cycles. The rats were either food restricted (dieting) or not restricted and refed regular or palatable food (binging).
Thirty days after normalization (full feeding, no restriction cycling), rats with a history of cycles of restriction and hyperphagia continued to exhibit persistent binge eating. This effect was shown particularly with palatable food, in stated conditions, and in response to acute 24-hr deprivation.
Results from this animal model implicate restriction and overeating on palatable food as biological determinants of binge-eating behaviors, including bulimia nervosa.
检验食物限制经历会导致持续性暴饮暴食这一假设。明尼苏达半饥饿实验以及对战俘的研究表明,长期食物限制会使进食行为发生显著变化(包括暴饮暴食),且在限制停止数十年后仍会持续。神经性贪食症患者在节食时也会暴饮暴食。限制可能是暴饮暴食和神经性贪食症病因中的一个风险因素。
让动物经历四种不同模式的为期12周的限制-再喂养循环。大鼠要么接受食物限制(节食),要么不限制并再喂常规或美味食物(暴饮暴食)。
在恢复正常饮食(完全进食,无限制循环)30天后,有过限制和暴饮暴食循环历史的大鼠继续表现出持续性暴饮暴食。在特定条件下,尤其是面对美味食物以及在24小时急性饥饿时,这种效应更为明显。
该动物模型的结果表明,对美味食物的限制和过度进食是包括神经性贪食症在内的暴饮暴食行为的生物学决定因素。