{"title":"Cognitive and Mental Health Profiles of Binge-Eating Populations with and without Comorbid Addiction","authors":"Jake Jeong, Jungwon Jang, Giho Jeon, Kwangyeol Baek","doi":"10.1101/2024.09.11.24313520","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Binge eating disorder (BED) is one of the most prevalent eating disorders and involves an increased risk of mental health problems, obesity and metabolic disease. Recent studies suggest that BED is similar to addictive disorders in its phenomenology and neurobiological mechanisms. Comorbid addiction (e.g., substance use disorders and behavioral addiction) is also very frequent in BED patients. However, it is still unclear whether BED population with comorbid addictions differ in their cognitive and mental health characteristics (e.g., impulsivity, behavioral inhibition, self-control, emotion regulation, mood and anxiety) than those without comorbid addiction. In the present study, we compared various psychometric scales across 30 binge-eating individuals with co-occurring addictive behaviors (i.e., alcohol, nicotine, gambling, and video games), 32 binge-eating individuals without addiction, and 178 healthy control subjects with neither binge-eating nor addiction. Both binge-eating groups showed a significant increase in inhibition motivation (BAS/BIS-inhibition), perceived stress, and state/trait anxiety compared to healthy controls, but there was no difference between the two binge-eating groups. Higher impulsivity and lower self-control were observed in both binge-eating populations to a significantly larger extent in the group with comorbid addiction. Interestingly, significantly increased depression and impaired emotion regulation (less use of cognitive reappraisal) were observed only in the binge-eating group with comorbid addiction when compared to the healthy controls. Our findings demonstrated the commonality and difference in binge-eating populations with and without comorbid addiction. It will help to elucidate cognitive and mental health aspects of comorbid addiction in BED and develop more tailored diagnoses and treatments.","PeriodicalId":501388,"journal":{"name":"medRxiv - Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology","volume":"37 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"medRxiv - Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.11.24313520","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Binge eating disorder (BED) is one of the most prevalent eating disorders and involves an increased risk of mental health problems, obesity and metabolic disease. Recent studies suggest that BED is similar to addictive disorders in its phenomenology and neurobiological mechanisms. Comorbid addiction (e.g., substance use disorders and behavioral addiction) is also very frequent in BED patients. However, it is still unclear whether BED population with comorbid addictions differ in their cognitive and mental health characteristics (e.g., impulsivity, behavioral inhibition, self-control, emotion regulation, mood and anxiety) than those without comorbid addiction. In the present study, we compared various psychometric scales across 30 binge-eating individuals with co-occurring addictive behaviors (i.e., alcohol, nicotine, gambling, and video games), 32 binge-eating individuals without addiction, and 178 healthy control subjects with neither binge-eating nor addiction. Both binge-eating groups showed a significant increase in inhibition motivation (BAS/BIS-inhibition), perceived stress, and state/trait anxiety compared to healthy controls, but there was no difference between the two binge-eating groups. Higher impulsivity and lower self-control were observed in both binge-eating populations to a significantly larger extent in the group with comorbid addiction. Interestingly, significantly increased depression and impaired emotion regulation (less use of cognitive reappraisal) were observed only in the binge-eating group with comorbid addiction when compared to the healthy controls. Our findings demonstrated the commonality and difference in binge-eating populations with and without comorbid addiction. It will help to elucidate cognitive and mental health aspects of comorbid addiction in BED and develop more tailored diagnoses and treatments.
暴饮暴食症(BED)是最普遍的饮食失调症之一,会增加出现精神健康问题、肥胖和代谢性疾病的风险。最新研究表明,暴食症在现象学和神经生物学机制上与成瘾性疾病相似。在 BED 患者中,合并成瘾(如药物使用障碍和行为成瘾)的情况也很常见。然而,与无合并成瘾者相比,合并成瘾的 BED 患者在认知和心理健康特征(如冲动、行为抑制、自我控制、情绪调节、情绪和焦虑)方面是否存在差异,目前仍不清楚。在本研究中,我们比较了 30 名伴有成瘾行为(即酒精、尼古丁、赌博和电子游戏)的暴饮暴食者、32 名无成瘾行为的暴饮暴食者和 178 名既无暴饮暴食行为也无成瘾行为的健康对照组受试者的各种心理测量量表。与健康对照组相比,两组暴饮暴食者的抑制动机(BAS/BIS-抑制)、感知压力和状态/特质焦虑都有显著增加,但两组暴饮暴食者之间没有差异。在两组暴饮暴食人群中都观察到了较高的冲动性和较低的自我控制能力,而在合并有成瘾的人群中,冲动性和自我控制能力明显更高。有趣的是,与健康对照组相比,只有伴有成瘾的暴饮暴食组的抑郁程度明显升高,情绪调节能力受损(较少使用认知再评价)。我们的研究结果表明,暴饮暴食人群在合并和不合并成瘾方面存在共性和差异。这将有助于阐明 BED 中合并成瘾的认知和心理健康方面的问题,并开发出更有针对性的诊断和治疗方法。