Exercise addiction: A narrative overview of research issues.

IF 8.3 2区 医学 Q1 Medicine
Aviv Weinstein, Attila Szabo
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

This narrative overview summarises the work on exercise addiction (EA) over the past 12 years and exposes critical conceptual and methodological issues. More than 1000 articles exist on EA, conceptualised as uncontrolled training harming the individual. Still, EA has no clinical diagnosis criteria at this time. Research is increasing continuously, but it is stale in advancing knowledge. Scalar measurement and lack of differentiation between addictive and instrumental exercise could be reasons for insufficient progress. Exercise addiction fits in the framework of behavioural addictions, but excessive exercise patterns also co-occur with other morbidities, including eating or body-image disorders. In these cases, exercise is instrumental; it functions to achieve a non-exercise-related goal. Therefore, it is essential to separate primary from secondary EA. Based on the interactional model, significant stress and capacity-exceeding ambitions fuel primary EA, while chief motives behind secondary EA embed body image dissatisfaction and eating disorders. Few reports exist on EA's brain mechanisms, which could delay its classification as a distinct psychiatric dysfunction. Treatment of EA involves cognitive-behavioural approaches, but we know little about their effectiveness. Conceptually focussed psychophysiological research and in-depth interviews, complementing scalar data, could answer several open questions in this widely studied but relatively stagnant scholastic field.

Abstract Image

运动成瘾:研究问题的叙述性概述。
本文概述了过去12年来关于运动成瘾(EA)的研究,并揭示了关键的概念和方法问题。关于EA的文章超过1000篇,其概念是不受控制的训练对个人的伤害。然而,目前尚无临床诊断标准。研究在不断增加,但在知识的推进上却显得陈旧。标量测量和缺乏对成瘾性运动和工具性运动的区分可能是进展不足的原因。运动成瘾符合行为成瘾的框架,但过度的运动模式也会与其他疾病共存,包括饮食或身体形象障碍。在这些情况下,锻炼是有用的;它的作用是实现一个与运动无关的目标。因此,将原发性EA与继发性EA区分开来是必要的。基于相互作用模型,显著的压力和能力超越野心推动了原发性EA,而继发性EA背后的主要动机包括身体形象不满和饮食失调。关于EA大脑机制的报道很少,这可能会推迟其作为一种独特的精神功能障碍的分类。EA的治疗涉及认知行为方法,但我们对其有效性知之甚少。概念集中的心理生理学研究和深度访谈,补充标量数据,可以回答这个广泛研究但相对停滞的学术领域的几个开放问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
19.30
自引率
1.20%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience (DCNS) endeavors to bridge the gap between clinical neuropsychiatry and the neurosciences by offering state-of-the-art information and original insights into pertinent clinical, biological, and therapeutic aspects. As an open access journal, DCNS ensures accessibility to its content for all interested parties. Each issue is curated to include expert reviews, original articles, and brief reports, carefully selected to offer a comprehensive understanding of the evolving landscape in clinical neuroscience. Join us in advancing knowledge and fostering dialogue in this dynamic field.
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