Abstract

ObjectiveThe aim of this study is to clarify the symptomatology of the eating disorders examining the prefrontal function and activity associated with self-regulation among participants with or without eating disorders.MethodsTen patients with anorexia nervosa, fourteen with bulimia nervosa, and fourteen healthy control participants performed two cognitive tasks assessing self-regulatory functions, an auditorily distracted word fluency task and a rock-paper-scissors task under the measurements on prefrontal oxyhemoglobin concentration with near infrared spectroscopy. The psychiatric symptoms of patient groups were assessed with several questionnaires.ResultsPatients with bulimia nervosa showed decreased performances and prefrontal hyper activation patterns. Prefrontal activities showed a moderate negative correlation with task performances not in the patient groups but only in the healthy participants. The prefrontal activities of the patient groups showed positive correlations with some symptom scale aspects.ConclusionsThe decreased cognitive abilities and characteristic prefrontal activation patterns associated with self-regulatory functions were shown in patients with bulimia nervosa, which correlated with their symptoms. These findings suggest inefficient prefrontal self-regulatory function of bulimia nervosa that associate with its symptoms.

Highlights

  • Eating disorders (EDs) are life-threatening mental diseases that include anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), and related disorders

  • word fluency task (WFT) (Figures 3, 4) Regarding the number of words produced during the WFT, a significant interaction was observed between the group factor and the distracter factor (F(2,34) = 3.389, p = 0.045, partial g2 = 0.166)

  • Different profiles in the tasks associated with self-regulation were found between the BN group and the healthy control (HC) group: the BN group showed decreased cognitive functions in the WFT through the emotion inhibition task and the RPSTloss, and the latter was accompanied by characteristic prefrontal activity

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Summary

Introduction

Eating disorders (EDs) are life-threatening mental diseases that include anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), and related disorders. Personality traits are important predisposition for ED Both AN and BN patients are characterized by their personality traits, such as perfectionism, obsessive-compulsiveness, neuroticism, negative emotionality, harm avoidance, low self-directedness, and low cooperativeness [1,2]. Patients with these features causing an impairment of daily life are diagnosed as having comorbid personality disorders, which can affect symptoms [3], dysregulation of dietary behavior [4], and the onset and course [5,6,7] of ED. According to a review paper, changes in self-regulation seem relevant to deficits in the executive functioning such as setshifting that is observed in ED [13]

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