Effects of Negative Affect in Individuals With Binge Eating Episodes
Atslēgvārdi
Abstrakts
Apraksts
Specific Aim 1: To test on two study days, one neutral affect and one negative affect day (affect induction) whether negative affect alters brain reinforcement learning in a dopamine system anchored taste reward learning paradigm (a task for prediction error and reward value computation) during functional magnetic resonance brain imaging (fMRI). Hypothesis 1: In response to negative and compared to neutral affect induction, binge eating disorder (BED) and bulimia nervosa (BN) will show increased positive prediction error and taste valuation regression with striatum and insula activation compared to obese (OB) and healthy control (HC) groups. This will be an indication that negative affect excessively activates dopamine related reward circuit response in BED and BN. Specific Aim 2: To study during a food choice paradigm the effects of negative affect on brain circuitry for cognitive control and food valuation. Specific Aim 2a: To study brain circuitry for food valuation in response to neutral or negative affect. Hypothesis 2a: In response to negative and compared to neutral affect induction, BED and BN groups will show greater striatal activation when rating food for taste, compared to OB and HC. This will indicate that BED and BN are associated with increased affect-regulated motivation to approach high calorie foods after negative affect induction and compared to OB and HC. Specific Aim 2b: To study brain control circuitry during food choice in response to neutral or negative affect. Hypothesis 2b: In response to negative and compared to neutral affect induction, BED and BN groups will show increased insula and striatal, but lower dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) activation compared to OB and HC groups. This will indicate that negative affect activates automatic food reward circuit response, but reduces cognitive control circuitry during food choice in BED and BN. Specific Aim 3: To test whether brain activation predicts food intake or negative affect. Specific Aim 3a: To test whether brain activation can predict food intake during a post-fMRI scan test meal. Hypothesis 3a: On negative- versus neutral-affect days, BN and BED will select more food in a post-fMRI scan test meal; lower DLPFC and higher striatal activation during food choice, and higher (prediction error) taste reward activation in insula and ventral striatum will predict greater food intake. Specific Aim 3b: To test whether brain activation during reward learning or food choice predicts negative affect measured by EMA on the study day, as well as measured between study days in the individual's naturalistic environment. Hypothesis 3b: Insula, ventral striatum and DLPFC activation (taste prediction error task, food choice task) during the negative affect condition will predict the intensity of negative affect immediately after fMRI, as well as intensity of negative affect episodes during the days between brain scans in the individual's naturalistic environment, suggesting a neurobiological affective vulnerability.
Datumi
Pēdējoreiz pārbaudīts: | 09/30/2019 |
Pirmais iesniegtais: | 12/27/2017 |
Paredzētā reģistrācija iesniegta: | 01/03/2018 |
Pirmais izlikts: | 01/07/2018 |
Pēdējais atjauninājums iesniegts: | 10/01/2019 |
Pēdējā atjaunināšana ievietota: | 10/03/2019 |
Faktiskais studiju sākuma datums: | 01/31/2018 |
Paredzamais primārās pabeigšanas datums: | 10/30/2022 |
Paredzamais pētījuma pabeigšanas datums: | 10/30/2022 |
Stāvoklis vai slimība
Iejaukšanās / ārstēšana
Behavioral: Behavioral
Fāze
Roku grupas
Roka | Iejaukšanās / ārstēšana |
---|---|
Experimental: Behavioral Negative Affect Task | Behavioral: Behavioral fMRI stress task |
Atbilstības kritēriji
Vecums, kas piemērots studijām | 18 Years Uz 18 Years |
Dzimumi, kas ir piemēroti studijām | All |
Pieņem veselīgus brīvprātīgos | Jā |
Kritēriji | Inclusion Criteria: Healthy Controls - Age 18-55 years old - Healthy body weight between 90 and 110 % average body weight since puberty. - Regular monthly menstrual cycle (if applicable) - Edinburgh Handedness Inventory Revised (EHI-R) LQ* score > +200 Obese - Age 18-55 years old - Current body mass index (BMI) > 30 kg/m2. - Stable food intake regimen in previous 4 weeks. - Edinburgh Handedness Inventory Revised (EHI-R) LQ* score > +200 - Obese for at least one year Binge Eating Disorder - Age 18-55 years old - Edinburgh Handedness Inventory Revised (EHI-R) LQ* score > +200 - DSM 5 diagnosis of Binge Eating Disorder A. Recurrent episodes of binge eating B. Binge eating episodes are associated with three (or more) of the following 1. Eating much more rapidly than normal. 2. Eating until feeling uncomfortably full. 3. Eating large amounts of food when not feeling physically hungry. 4. Eating alone because of embarrassment. 5. Feeling disgusted with oneself, depressed, or very guilty after overeating. C. Marked distress regarding binge eating is present. D. At least once a week for 3 months. E. The binge eating is not associated with the recurrent use of inappropriate compensatory behavior. Bulimia Nervosa - Age 18-55 years old - Edinburgh Handedness Inventory Revised (EHI-R) LQ* score > +200 - DSM 5 diagnosis of Bulimia Nervosa A. Recurrent episodes of binge eating Eating, in a discrete period of time, an amount of food that is definitely larger than most people would eat during a similar period of time and under similar circumstances. A sense of lack of control over eating during the episode. B. Recurrent inappropriate compensatory behavior in order to prevent weight gain, such as self-induced vomiting; misuse of laxatives, diuretics, or other medications; fasting; or excessive exercise. C. At least once a week for 3 months. D. Self-evaluation is unduly influenced by body shape and weight. Exclusion Criteria: Healthy Controls - Current pregnancy or breast feeding within last 3 months - First degree relative with current or past eating disorder - Current Medications other than BCP or IUD - Past or present Axis I psychiatric disorder including substance or alcohol use disorder as determined through SCID-5 clinical interview - First degree relative with an eating disorder - Major Medical illness - Recent history of suspected substance abuse or a lifetime history of psychostimulant abuse and/or dependence - Metal implants or braces Obese - Current pregnancy or breast feeding within last 3 months - First degree relative with current or past eating disorder - Current or previous eating disorder diagnosis - Current Medications other than BCP or IUD - Past or present Axis I psychiatric disorder including substance or alcohol use disorder as determined through SCID-5 clinical interview - Major Medical illness - Recent history of suspected substance abuse or a lifetime history of psychostimulant abuse and/or dependence - Metal implants or braces Binge Eating Disorder - Pregnancy or breast feeding within last 3 months - Lifetime history of bipolar disorder or psychosis - Use of a psychostimulant within the prior 6 months - Recent history of substance abuse or dependence (except for alcohol and cannabis use) - Major Medical illness - Metal implants or braces Bulimia Nervosa - Pregnancy or breast feeding within last 3 months - Lifetime history of bipolar disorder or psychosis - Use of a psychostimulant within the prior 6 months - Recent history of substance abuse or dependence (except for alcohol and cannabis use) - Major Medical illness - Metal implants or braces |
Rezultāts
Primārie rezultāti
1. Taste Reward Brain Response to Negative Affect fMRI Task [5 years]
2. Food Choice Brain Response to Negative Affect fMRI Task [5 years]
3. Brain Activation and Food Intake/negative Affect Relationships [5 years]