Examining emotion regulation in binge-eating disorder.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Anna Walenda, Barbara Kostecka, Philip S Santangelo, Katarzyna Kucharska
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Background: Inefficient mechanisms of emotional regulation appear essential in understanding the development and maintenance of binge-eating disorder (BED). Previous research focused mainly on a very limited emotion regulation strategies in BED, such as rumination, suppression, and positive reappraisal. Therefore, the aim of the study was to assess a wider range of emotional regulation strategies (i.e. acceptance, refocusing on planning, positive refocusing, positive reappraisal, putting into perspective, self-blame, other-blame, rumination, and catastrophizing), as well as associations between those strategies and binge-eating-related beliefs (negative, positive, and permissive), and clinical variables (eating disorders symptoms, both anxiety, depressive symptoms, and alexithymia).

Methods: Women diagnosed with BED (n = 35) according to the DSM-5 criteria and healthy women (n = 41) aged 22-60 years were assessed using: the Eating Attitudes Test-26, the Eating Beliefs Questionnaire-18, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, the Toronto Alexithymia Scale-20, the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire, and the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale. Statistical analyses included: Student t - tests or Mann-Whitney U tests for testing group differences between BED and HC group, and Pearson's r coefficient or Spearman's rho for exploring associations between the emotion regulation difficulties and strategies, and clinical variables and binge-eating-related beliefs in both groups.

Results: The BED group presented with a significantly higher level of emotion regulation difficulties such as: nonacceptance of emotional responses, lack of emotional clarity, difficulties engaging in goal-directed behavior, impulse control difficulties, and limited access to emotion regulation strategies compared to the healthy controls. Moreover, patients with BED were significantly more likely to use maladaptive strategies (rumination and self-blame) and less likely to use adaptive strategies (positive refocusing and putting into perspective). In the clinical group, various difficulties in emotion regulation difficulties occurred to be positively correlated with the level of alexithymia, and anxiety and depressive symptoms. Regarding emotion regulation strategies, self-blame and catastrophizing were positively related to anxiety symptoms, but solely catastrophizing was related to the severity of eating disorder psychopathology.

Conclusions: Our results indicate an essential and still insufficiently understood role of emotional dysregulation in BED. An especially important construct in this context seems to be alexithymia, which was strongly related to the majority of emotion regulation difficulties. Therefore, it might be beneficial to pay special attention to this construct when planning therapeutic interventions, as well as to the maladaptive emotion regulation strategies self-blame and catastrophizing, which were significantly related to BED psychopathology.

暴饮暴食症患者情绪调节的研究。
背景:低效率的情绪调节机制对于理解暴饮暴食症(BED)的发展和维持至关重要。以往的研究主要集中在反刍、抑制和积极的再评价等非常有限的情绪调节策略上。因此,本研究的目的是评估更广泛的情绪调节策略(即接受、重新关注计划、积极重新关注、积极重新评估、正确看待、自责、他人指责、反思和灾难化),以及这些策略与暴饮暴食相关信念(消极、积极和宽容)和临床变量(饮食失调症状,包括焦虑、抑郁症状和述情障碍)之间的关联。方法:采用饮食态度测试(26)、饮食信念问卷(18)、医院焦虑抑郁量表(20)、多伦多述情障碍量表(20)、认知情绪调节问卷(20)和情绪调节困难量表(20)对35名符合DSM-5诊断为BED的女性和41名年龄在22-60岁的健康女性进行评估。统计分析包括:用学生t检验或Mann-Whitney U检验检验BED组和HC组之间的组间差异,用Pearson r系数或Spearman rho来探讨两组中情绪调节困难与策略、临床变量和暴食相关信念之间的关系。结果:与健康对照组相比,BED组表现出更高水平的情绪调节困难,如:不接受情绪反应、缺乏情绪清晰度、难以参与目标导向行为、冲动控制困难和难以获得情绪调节策略。此外,BED患者更有可能使用适应不良策略(反刍和自责),而不太可能使用适应策略(积极的重新聚焦和正确看待问题)。临床组出现各种情绪调节困难与述情障碍水平、焦虑抑郁症状呈正相关。在情绪调节策略方面,自责和灾难化与焦虑症状呈正相关,而仅灾难化与饮食失调精神病理严重程度呈正相关。结论:我们的研究结果表明情绪失调在BED中的重要作用,但仍未得到充分的理解。在这种情况下,一个特别重要的构念似乎是述情障碍,它与大多数情绪调节困难密切相关。因此,在制定治疗干预措施时,应特别注意这一结构,并注意与BED精神病理显著相关的适应不良情绪调节策略自责和灾难化。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
30
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation provides a platform for researchers and clinicians interested in borderline personality disorder (BPD) as a currently highly challenging psychiatric disorder. Emotion dysregulation is at the core of BPD but also stands on its own as a major pathological component of the underlying neurobiology of various other psychiatric disorders. The journal focuses on the psychological, social and neurobiological aspects of emotion dysregulation as well as epidemiology, phenomenology, pathophysiology, treatment, neurobiology, genetics, and animal models of BPD.
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