情绪失调在进食障碍患者有问题的运动中的作用

Taylor R. Perry, Dominic M. Denning, Walter H. Kaye, C. Wierenga, Tiffany A. Brown
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摘要

有问题的运动在进食障碍(ED)中很常见,并且与不良的治疗预后有关;因此,了解与有问题的运动相关的因素可能有助于改善治疗效果。在非临床样本中,情绪失调与问题性运动有关;然而,在临床 ED 样本中,情绪失调与问题性运动之间的纵向关联尚未得到研究。本研究考察了临床 ED 样本中:(1)情绪失调是否与问题性运动症状严重程度和问题性运动频率相关;(2)治疗期间情绪失调的早期变化是否可预测问题性运动症状严重程度和问题性运动频率。ED患者(207人)在入院、入院后1个月和出院时填写了情绪调节困难量表(DERS)、进食障碍检查问卷和进食病理症状量表的过度运动分量表。DERS 总分与入院时的症状严重程度和问题运动频率相关。此外,从入院到出院1个月期间,DERS总分的早期变化可预测问题运动症状的严重程度,但不能预测出院时问题运动的频率。因此,在急诊室中,情绪失调可能会维持问题运动的症状,但不会维持问题运动的频率,这为针对情绪失调可能有助于减轻问题运动的症状严重程度提供了初步证据。
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The Role of Emotion Dysregulation in Problematic Exercise in those with Eating Disorders
Problematic exercise is common in eating disorders (EDs) and is associated with poor treatment prognosis; thus, understanding factors associated with problematic exercise may help improve treatment outcomes. In non-clinical samples, emotion dysregulation has been associated with problematic exercise; however, longitudinal associations between emotion dysregulation and problematic exercise have not been examined in clinical ED samples. This study examined if (1) emotion dysregulating was associated with problematic exercise symptom severity and frequency of problematic exercise, and (2) early changes in emotion dysregulation during treatment predicted problematic exercise symptom severity and frequency of problematic exercise in a clinical ED sample. ED patients (N = 207) completed the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS), the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire, and the Excessive Exercise subscale of Eating Pathology Symptoms Inventory at admission, 1-month post-admission, and discharge. DERS total score was correlated with symptom severity and frequency of problematic exercise at admission. Furthermore, early changes in DERS total score from admission to 1-month predicted problematic exercise symptom severity but not frequency of problematic exercise at discharge. Thus, emotion dysregulation may maintain symptoms of problematic exercise but not frequency in EDs, providing initial evidence that targeting emotion dysregulation may help reduce symptom severity of problematic exercise.
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