37 results on '"Klump, Kelly"'
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2. Hormonal contraceptive use moderates the association between worry and error-related brain activity
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Louis, Courtney C., Kneip, Chelsea, Moran, Tim P., Beltz, Adriene M., Klump, Kelly L., and Moser, Jason S.
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- 2022
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3. Predictors of alcohol problems in college women: The role of depressive symptoms, disordered eating, and family history of alcoholism
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Harrell, Zaje A.T., Slane, Jennifer D., and Klump, Kelly L.
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Mortgage insurance -- Psychological aspects ,Eating disorders -- Psychological aspects ,Universities and colleges -- Psychological aspects ,Depression, Mental -- Psychological aspects ,Drinking of alcoholic beverages -- Psychological aspects ,Women -- Psychological aspects ,Alcoholism -- Psychological aspects ,Health ,Sociology and social work - Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2008.10.019 Byline: Zaje A.T. Harrell, Jennifer D. Slane, Kelly L. Klump Keywords: Alcohol use; College women; Eating behaviors; Depressive symptoms; Family history Abstract: Disordered eating and depressive symptoms are established correlates of alcohol use in college women. Family history of alcoholism (FHA) is also related to problematic alcohol use, but there have been limited studies of how it relates to other established cofactors in women. Predictive associations between disordered eating (i.e., overall levels as well as binge eating), depressive symptoms, and alcohol problems were examined in a sample of 295 female twins. The direct and moderating effects of FHA on the relationships between alcohol problems, disordered eating, and depressive symptoms were investigated. Using hierarchical linear modeling depressive symptoms, but not disordered eating or FHA, significantly predicted alcohol problems. However, there was a significant interaction between disordered eating and FHA; disordered eating was associated with alcohol problems in those with a positive FHA. The implications for high-risk subgroups of college women are discussed. Author Affiliation: Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, Department of Psychology, Psychology Building 134B, East Lansing, MI 48824-1116, United States
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- 2009
4. Ovarian hormones reduce the negative association between worry and cognitive control: A combined neural and behavioral investigation.
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Russman Block, Stefanie R., Klump, Kelly L., Beltz, Adriene M., Burt, S. Alexandra, and Moser, Jason S.
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CONTROL (Psychology) , *COGNITIVE ability , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *OVARIES , *CINGULATE cortex - Abstract
Increased reactivity to response conflict and errors, processes governed by the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), have both been implicated in anxiety. Anxiety is also more common in females than males. Importantly, natural changes in ovarian hormones levels are related to fluctuations in anxiety symptoms in healthy and clinical populations, and ovarian hormones likely modulate prefrontal cortex structure and function. No studies, however, have examined the role of fluctuating ovarian hormones in the association between anxiety and cognitive control across the menstrual cycle. In this multimodal proof-of-concept study, naturally cycling females (N = 30 twins from 14 complete twin pairs and 2 participants whose co-twin was not in the final sample; age 18–29) provided saliva samples to assay for estradiol and progesterone and completed the Penn State Worry Questionnaire for 35 consecutive days. At two time points, during projected pre-ovulatory and post-ovulatory phases, they also completed the Flanker task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging to probe cognitive control-related dACC activity. Multilevel modeling was used to examine within- and between-person effects of hormones and worry on cognitive-control indices. On days when estradiol and progesterone were low relative to a female's own average (i.e., within-subjects effect), worry was associated with greater flanker interference. In females with higher estradiol and progesterone levels compared to other females (i.e., between-subject effects), worry was associated with less error-related dACC activity, irrespective of the day that dACC activity was assessed. Findings suggest a protective effect of ovarian hormones on the link between worry and cognitive control. Associations between worry and conflict-monitoring were sensitive to daily hormonal fluctuations (within-person states), whereas associations between worry and error-monitoring were sensitive to mean hormone levels (between-person traits), suggesting that ovarian hormones are critical to consider in studies examining associations between anxiety and cognitive control in females. • Ovarian hormones protected against the adverse impact of worry on cognitive control. • Effect on flanker performance was sensitive to daily hormonal fluctuations. • Effect on neural activity was sensitive to mean hormone levels. • Findings applied to both estradiol and progesterone. • The link between worry and cognitive control in females varies by ovarian hormones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Testing the Tripartite Influence Model among heterosexual, bisexual, and lesbian women.
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Hazzard, Vivienne M., Schaefer, Lauren M., Schaumberg, Katherine, Bardone-Cone, Anna M., Frederick, David A., Klump, Kelly L., Anderson, Drew A., and Thompson, J. Kevin
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• The Tripartite Influence Model is supported among bisexual and lesbian women. • Bisexual women may experience more peer appearance pressures than lesbian women. • Thin-ideal internalization may be particularly harmful for bisexual women. This cross-sectional study explored similarities and differences between heterosexual, bisexual, and lesbian women in levels of, and relationships between, the following constructs using a Tripartite Influence Model framework: family, peer, and media appearance pressures, thin- and muscular-ideal internalization, and eating disorder (ED) pathology. Self-identified heterosexual (n = 1,528), bisexual (n = 89), and lesbian (n = 278) undergraduate women completed the Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Appearance Questionnaire-4 and the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire. Sexual orientation differences in appearance pressures, appearance-ideal internalization, and ED pathology were examined via analysis of variance tests. Relationships between these variables were examined with multi-group path analyses, controlling for age, race/ethnicity, and body mass index. Compared with lesbian women, heterosexual and bisexual women reported higher levels of peer appearance pressures. Paths from peer appearance pressures and thin-ideal internalization to shape/weight overvaluation and body dissatisfaction were strongest for bisexual women. Overall, results indicate notable similarities between heterosexual, bisexual, and lesbian women. However, preliminary evidence for potential differences highlights the importance of examining variation in ED risk between sexual minority subgroups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Neighborhood poverty during childhood prospectively predicts adolescent functional brain network architecture.
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Michael, Cleanthis, Tillem, Scott, Sripada, Chandra S., Burt, S. Alexandra, Klump, Kelly L., and Hyde, Luke W.
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Family poverty has been associated with altered brain structure, function, and connectivity in youth. However, few studies have examined how disadvantage within the broader neighborhood may influence functional brain network organization. The present study leveraged a longitudinal community sample of 538 twins living in low-income neighborhoods to evaluate the prospective association between exposure to neighborhood poverty during childhood (6–10 y) with functional network architecture during adolescence (8–19 y). Using resting-state and task-based fMRI, we generated two latent measures that captured intrinsic brain organization across the whole-brain and network levels – network segregation and network segregation-integration balance. While age was positively associated with network segregation and network balance overall across the sample, these associations were moderated by exposure to neighborhood poverty. Specifically, these positive associations were observed only in youth from more, but not less, disadvantaged neighborhoods. Moreover, greater exposure to neighborhood poverty predicted reduced network segregation and network balance in early, but not middle or late, adolescence. These effects were detected both across the whole-brain system as well as specific functional networks, including fronto-parietal, default mode, salience, and subcortical systems. These findings indicate that where children live may exert long-reaching effects on the organization and development of the adolescent brain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Socialization and selection effects in the association between weight conscious peer groups and thin-ideal internalization: A co-twin control study.
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VanHuysse, Jessica L., Burt, S. Alexandra, O’Connor, Shannon M., Thompson, J. Kevin, and Klump, Kelly L.
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Affiliation with weight conscious peer groups is theorized to increase thin-ideal internalization through socialization processes. However, selection effects could contribute if genetic and/or environmental predispositions lead to affiliation with weight conscious peers. Co-twin control methodology was used to examine socialization and selection effects in 614 female twins (ages 8–15) from the Michigan State University Twin Registry (MSUTR). Thin-ideal internalization and peer group characteristics were assessed via self-report questionnaires. Results suggested the presence of both socialization and selection effects. In terms of socialization, twins who reported increased exposure to weight conscious peers relative to their co-twins had elevated thin-ideal internalization scores, regardless of zygosity. However, associations between weight conscious peers and thin-ideal internationalization within twin pairs were attenuated, suggesting that genetic and shared environmental selection effects also contribute. Findings significantly extend previous work by confirming the presence of socialization processes and highlighting selection processes to be examined in future longitudinal research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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8. 157. Disordered Eating in Transgender Youth: A Comparison to Population-Based and Clinical Samples.
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Quiñones, Isabel Cristina, Selkie, Ellen, Mammel, Kathy, Haedt-Matt, Alissa A., Klump, Kelly L., Burt, S Alexandra, and Van Huysse, Jessica L.
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- 2022
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9. The ignored role of disadvantage in eating disorders.
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Burnette, C. Blair, Burt, S. Alexandra, and Klump, Kelly L.
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EATING disorders - Abstract
The misconception that eating disorders are conditions of affluence has shaped research and public understanding for decades. Here, we highlight links between socioeconomic disadvantage and eating disorder risk. With prevailing stereotypes discredited, we argue that considering disadvantage as a key eating disorder risk factor will advance science and reduce disparities The misconception that eating disorders are conditions of affluence has shaped research and public understanding for decades. Here, we highlight links between socioeconomic disadvantage and eating disorder risk. With prevailing stereotypes discredited, we argue that considering disadvantage as a key eating disorder risk factor will advance science and reduce disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Differential strain vulnerability to binge eating behaviors in rats.
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Hildebrandt, Britny A., Klump, Kelly L., Racine, Sarah E., and Sisk, Cheryl L.
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COMPULSIVE eating , *ANIMAL behavior , *PHENOTYPES , *MOLECULAR genetics , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LABORATORY rats - Abstract
Abstract: Binge eating is a significantly heritable phenotype, but efforts to detect specific risk genes have fallen short. Identification of animal strain differences in risk for binge eating could highlight genetic differences across individuals of the same species that can be exploited in future animal and molecular genetic research. The current study aimed to explore strain differences in risk for binge eating in Sprague–Dawley versus Wistar female rats using the Binge Eating Resistant/Binge Eating Prone model. A sample of male Sprague–Dawley rats, a known low-risk group for binge eating, was included as a comparison group. A total of 83 rats (23 Wistar females, 30 Sprague–Dawley females, 30 Sprague–Dawley males) completed a protocol of intermittently administered, palatable food. Binge eating prone (BEP) and binge eating resistant (BER) rats were identified using a tertile approach. Sprague–Dawley female rats consumed the highest amount of palatable food and were more likely to be classified as BEP compared to Wistar female and Sprague–Dawley male rats. Wistar female rats were not significantly different from Sprague–Dawley male rats in their palatable food intake and tendency to be classified as BER rather than BEP. Sprague–Dawley female rats appear to be a particularly vulnerable genotype for binge eating. Comparisons between this group and others could help identify specific genetic/biological factors that differentiate it from lower risk groups. The reward system, linked to binge eating in humans, is a possible candidate to explore. Strain differences in the reward system could help increase understanding of individual differences in risk for binge eating in humans. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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11. The impact of neighborhood disadvantage on amygdala reactivity: Pathways through neighborhood social processes.
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Suarez, Gabriela L., Burt, S. Alexandra, Gard, Arianna M., Burton, Jared, Clark, D. Angus, Klump, Kelly L., and Hyde, Luke W.
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Youth growing up in disadvantaged neighborhoods are more likely than their advantaged peers to face negative behavioral and mental health outcomes. Although studies have shown that adversity can undermine positive development via its impact on the developing brain, few studies have examined the association between neighborhood disadvantage and neural function, and no study has investigated potential social mechanisms within the neighborhood that might link neighborhood disadvantage to altered neural function. The current study evaluated the association between neighborhood disadvantage and amygdala reactivity during socioemotional face processing. We also assessed whether and which neighborhood-level social processes were related to amygdala reactivity, and whether these social processes mediated or moderated the association between neighborhood disadvantage and altered amygdala reactivity. We examined these aims in a registered report, using a sample of twins aged 7–19 years (N = 354 families, 708 twins) recruited from birth records with enrichment for neighborhood disadvantage. Twins completed a socioemotional face processing fMRI task and a sample of unrelated participants from the twins' neighborhoods were also recruited to serve as informants on neighborhood social processes. We found that neighborhood disadvantage was associated with greater right amygdala reactivity to threat, but only when neighborhood informants perceived norms in the neighborhood to be more permissive regarding general safety and management. The findings from this research add to the growing literature highlighting the influence of neighborhood disadvantage on amygdala function and the ways that supportive social processes may buffer the impact of adversity on brain function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Smoking in eating disorders
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Anzengruber, Doris, Klump, Kelly L., Thornton, Laura, Brandt, Harry, Crawford, Steve, Fichter, Manfred M., Halmi, Katherine A., Johnson, Craig, Kaplan, Allan S., LaVia, Maria, Mitchell, James, Strober, Michael, Woodside, D. Blake, Rotondo, Alessandro, Berrettini, Wade H., Kaye, Walter H., and Bulik, Cynthia M.
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PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *APPETITE disorders , *NICOTINE , *BEHAVIOR - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Smoking has been reported as an appetite and weight control method in eating disorders; however, few studies have explored patterns of smoking across subtypes of eating disorders. The aim of this paper was to explore the patterns and prevalence of smoking behavior in 1524 women from two of the multisite Price Foundation Genetic studies. Method: Smoking behavior was assessed in 306 individuals with anorexia nervosa-restricting type (RAN), 186 with anorexia nervosa-purging type (PAN), 180 with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa (ANBN), 107 with anorexia nervosa-binging type (BAN), 71 individuals with purging type-bulimia nervosa (PBN), and 674 female community controls. We compared smoking prevalence and smoking behaviors across eating disorder (ED) subtypes and in comparison to controls using the Fagerstrom Test of Nicotine Dependence (FTND). Results: Overall, women with eating disorders reported higher rates of smoking and greater nicotine dependence than controls. Women with binge/purge subtypes of eating disorders reported the highest rates of smoking of all of the subtypes. Smoking in eating disorders was related to impulsive personality traits. Conclusions: Women with eating disorders appear to be at increased risk for smoking, particularly those who binge eat and/or purge and display impulsive personality characteristics. Given the high prevalence, the impact of ongoing smoking on maintenance of eating disorders symptoms is worthy of both clinical and research attention. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2006
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13. The Minnesota Eating Behavior Survey: A brief measure of disordered eating attitudes and behaviors
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von Ranson, Kristin M., Klump, Kelly L., Iacono, William G., and McGue, Matt
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BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *APPETITE disorders , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Abstract: This article describes details of the development and psychometric characteristics of a brief self-report inventory for assessing attitudes and behaviors symptomatic of eating disorders that is currently in use in a longitudinal study of over 700 families with 11-year-old or 17-year-old twin girls. The Minnesota Eating Behavior Survey (MEBS), formerly the Minnesota Eating Disorder Inventory, is a 30-item measure developed for use with children as young as 10 years as well as adults. An examination of the MEBS''s psychometric properties in a large, community sample of girls, women, and men demonstrated good factor congruence, internal consistency reliability, three-year stability, as well as evidence of concurrent and criterion validity. This questionnaire has promise as a screening and assessment measure for eating disturbance in cross-sectional and longitudinal research involving individuals of a wide range of ages. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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14. The effects of puberty and ovarian hormone removal on developmental trajectories of palatable food and chow intake in female rats.
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Klump, Kelly L., Kashy, Deborah A., Culbert, Kristen M., Sinclair, Elaine B., Hildebrandt, Britny A., Van Huysee, Jessica L., O'Connor, Shannon M., Fowler, Natasha, Johnson, Alexander, and Sisk, Cheryl L.
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OVARIES , *FOOD consumption , *REWARD (Psychology) , *RATS , *FEMALES - Abstract
• Palatable food (PF) intake increases substantially during puberty in female rats. • Pre-pubertal ovariectomy (P-OVX) further increases PF intake during puberty. • Chow intake shows pre-pubertal increases that are not influenced by P-OVX. • Food type differences reveal possible hormone and reward mechanisms during puberty. Objective: Palatable food (PF) intake is significantly greater in females than males and increases during adolescence. Previous data suggest that puberty and ovarian hormones may contribute to these sex and developmental differences, but few studies have examined this possibility. The aim of the current study was to address these gaps by examining trajectories of PF and chow intake during pre-puberty, puberty, and adulthood in intact female rats (Study 1) as well as in those receiving pre-pubertal ovariectomies (P-OVX) (Study 2). Method: We examined our study aims using archival data from 66 intact Sprague-Dawley female rats (Study 1) and 77 P-OVX and 79 intact Sprague-Dawley female rats (Study 2). PF and chow intake were measured using a free-choice, intermittent exposure paradigm in which rats were exposed to both food types starting in pre-puberty and continuing into adulthood. Results: Mixed linear models revealed a specific effect of puberty on PF intake in both studies. PF intake increased substantially during puberty in all rats, but increases were particularly pronounced in P-OVX rats in Study 2. By contrast, chow intake increased significantly during pre-puberty (rather than puberty) in both studies, and these increases were relatively unaffected by P-OVX. Discussion: Findings confirm a specific effect of puberty and ovarian hormone removal on PF intake in female rats. Differential trajectories of PF versus chow intake highlight potential reward-based processes in pubertal and ovarian hormone effects on PF intake in females. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. A Narrative Review of Sex Differences in Eating Disorders: Is There a Biological Basis?
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Culbert, Kristen M., Sisk, Cheryl L., and Klump, Kelly L.
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Eating disorders and their core symptoms (eg, binge eating, body weight/shape concerns) disproportionately affect females, and these sex-differentiated effects become prominent during and after puberty. Although psychosocial influences such as heightened sociocultural pressures for thinness in girls and women contribute to this sex imbalance, biological factors could also play an important role. This narrative review summarizes evidence of biological factors underlying the sex-differentiated prevalence of eating pathology as well as within-sex variability in risk. There are sex differences in the pubertal emergence of genetic effects on eating pathology (adrenarche in males; gonadarche in females), and at least some genetic contributions to eating pathology seem to vary between the sexes. Furthermore, sex steroid hormones (eg, testosterone, estradiol, progesterone) are leading contributors to differential risk for eating pathology in males and females across the life span. Emerging data suggest that between-sex and within-sex variability in risk might occur via hormone-driven modulation (activation/deactivation) of genetic influences and neural responsiveness to food-related cues. There is a biological basis to heightened risk for eating pathology in females, relative to males, as well as unique biological influences within each sex. Findings from this review highlight the importance of studying both sexes and considering sex-specific biological mechanisms that may underlie differential risk for eating pathology • Some genetic effects on eating pathology vary between the sexes. • Sex steroids impact sex-specific genetic and phenotypic effects on eating pathology. • Testosterone exerts protective effects that reduce eating pathology in males. • Lower estradiol enhances genetic and phenotypic eating pathology risk in girls/women. • Neural responses to palatable food differ between the sexes, possibly via estradiol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Reduced sensitivity to devaluation for instrumental but not consummatory behaviors in binge eating prone rats.
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LeMon, Janelle V., Sisk, Cheryl L., Klump, Kelly L., and Johnson, Alexander W.
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BULIMIA , *OPERANT behavior , *RATS , *EATING disorders , *FOOD preferences - Abstract
Binge eating is characterized by the consumption of a large amount of palatable food in a short period of time and is a core feature of many eating disorders. Patients with eating disorders are also known to display impairments in inhibitory control, cognition and decision-making, which may promote and maintain binge eating symptomology. In the current study, we examined whether rats that were subsequently characterized as displaying a higher propensity to binge eat would show pre-existing deficits in reinforcer devaluation—a paradigm used to examine decision-making following reductions in the value of a food reinforcer. Female rats were first trained to respond on two levers for the delivery of two food reinforcers (sucrose and maltodextrin solutions). At the test stage, rats were provided 1 h access to one of the two reinforcers to allow for devaluation via sensory specific satiety, immediately followed by an extinction test with both levers. Normal rats typically show reductions in responding on the lever associated with the devalued reinforcer (i.e., intact goal-directed responding). Subsequently, we used intermittent access to palatable food to identify high (BE prone [BEP]; n = 14), intermediate (BE neutral [BEN]; n = 48), and low (BE resistant [BER]; n = 13) phenotypes of binge eating. Prior reinforcer devaluation performance showed BEN and BER rats suppressed responding on the lever associated with the devalued reinforcer while BEP rats did not. This insensitivity to instrumental reinforcer devaluation in BEP rats did not reflect impaired sensory-specific satiety as during a food choice test, BEP rats showed a more robust alteration in food preferences following devaluation. Additionally, across all rats sensory specific satiety was correlated with subsequent intake of palatable food. Collectively, these findings suggest dissociable effects of devaluation procedures on instrumental actions and consummatory behaviors in BEP rats, and may indicate that pre-existing differences in goal-directed behavior and sensory-specific satiety contribute to the propensity to overeat palatable food. • Female rats were trained in an instrumental reinforcer devaluation task. • Intermittent access to palatable food was used to characterize binge eating proneness. • Binge eating prone (BEP) rats displayed pre-existing instrumental reinforcer devaluation deficits. • In BEP rats sensory-specific satiety was more effective at altering the preference for the reinforcers. • Devaluation procedures have a dissociable influence over consummatory and instrumental behaviors in BEP rats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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17. Parenting Is an Environmental Predictor of Callous-Unemotional Traits and Aggression: A Monozygotic Twin Differences Study.
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Waller, Rebecca, Hyde, Luke W., Klump, Kelly L., and Burt, S. Alexandra
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CHILD rearing , *TWINS , *PARENTING , *EMOTIONS , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) - Abstract
Objective: Callous-unemotional (CU) traits increase risk for children to develop severe childhood aggression and conduct disorder. CU traits are typically described as highly heritable, and debate continues about whether the parenting environment matters in their etiology. Strong genetically informed designs are needed to test for the presence of environmental links between parenting practices and CU traits. Our objective was to determine whether parental harshness and parental warmth were related to children's aggression or CU traits when accounting for genetically mediated effects.Method: We examined 227 monozygotic twin pairs (454 children) drawn from population-based and at-risk samples of twin families, leading to oversampling of twins living in poverty. We computed multi-informant difference scores combining mother and father reports of their harshness and warmth toward each twin, and differences in mother reports of each twin's aggression and CU traits.Results: Twin differences in parental harshness were related to differences in both aggression and CU traits, such that the twin who received harsher parenting had higher aggression and more CU traits. Differences in parental warmth were uniquely related to differences in CU traits, such that the twin receiving warmer parenting evidenced lower CU traits. These effects were not moderated by child sex, age, or family income, with the exception that the relationship between differential parental harshness and differential child aggression was stronger among low-income families.Conclusion: Parenting is related to child CU traits and aggression, over and above genetically mediated effects, with low parental warmth being a unique environmental correlate of CU traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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18. Personality clusters and family relationships in women with disordered eating symptoms.
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Perkins, Patrick Scott, Slane, Jennifer D., and Klump, Kelly L.
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PERSONALITY , *FAMILY relations , *DIAGNOSIS of eating disorders , *SYMPTOMS , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *CLINICAL pathology , *SOCIAL skills , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Personality clusters in women with eating disorders predict important clinical variables (e.g., social functioning) better than eating disorder diagnoses. However, it is unknown whether these findings generalize to samples with subclinical pathology. Further, little is known about associations between personality clusters and family relationships. This study sought to address these limitations by replicating personality clusters in a college sample of women with disordered eating symptoms Based on reported symptoms, women were divided into a restricting, binging and purging, or control (i.e., symptom free) group. Participants completed measures of personality, social functioning, and family relationships. Cluster analyses suggested three personality groups (i.e., Adaptive, Rigid, Dysregulated) which corresponded to those identified previously in clinical samples. Personality clusters, and not disordered eating groups, significantly predicted social functioning, and these clusters were differentially associated with family conflict type. Meaningful personality clusters are present in subclinical populations and have clinical utility in predicting social functioning and family relationships. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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19. Examining the relationship between dietary restraint and binge eating: Differential effects of major and minor stressors
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Woods, Amanda M., Racine, Sarah E., and Klump, Kelly L.
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BULIMIA , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *EATING disorders in women , *DIAGNOSIS of eating disorders , *LIFE change events , *UNDERGRADUATES , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Abstract: This study sought to examine the complex interactive impact of major stress and minor stressors on the relation between dietary restraint and binge eating. Participants were 497 undergraduate females who completed an online questionnaire that included measures of binge eating (modified version of the bulimia scale of the Eating Disorder Inventory-2; EDI-2), major life stressors (the Social Readjustment Rating Scale; SRRS), minor stressors (Daily Stress Inventory; DSI), and dietary restraint (Restraint Scale; RS). A hierarchal linear regression revealed a significant three-way interaction among dietary restraint, life event stress, and daily stress that accounted for a significant proportion of the variance in binge eating above and beyond all main effects and two-way interactions. Findings suggested that the interactive relationship among dietary restraint and daily stress is present only under conditions of high life event stress. Overall, the relationship between dietary restraint and binge eating appears to be quite complex and dependent upon differential levels of daily and life event stressors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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20. Differences in genetic and environmental influences on body weight and shape concerns across pubertal development in females.
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O'Connor, Shannon M., Culbert, Kristen M., Mayhall, Laura A., Burt, S. Alexandra, and Klump, Kelly L.
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BODY weight , *MENARCHE , *EATING disorders , *GEOMETRIC shapes , *FEMALES , *PUBERTY - Abstract
The heritability of disordered eating increases during puberty; however, prior studies have largely examined a composite score of disordered eating, rather than specific symptoms. Body weight and shape concerns cut across all eating disorder diagnoses and are some of the strongest prospective risk factors for the development of eating disorders. Yet, little is known about potential developmental increases or decreases in genetic and environmental influences for these key symptoms. This study examined differences in genetic and environmental effects on a range of body weight and shape concerns during puberty and compared results to findings for overall levels of disordered eating symptoms. Participants were 926 same-sex female twins (ages 8–16) from the Michigan State University Twin Registry. Well-validated questionnaires were used to examine pubertal maturation, overall levels of disordered eating, and a range of cognitive body weight/shape constructs: body dissatisfaction, weight/shape concerns, and weight preoccupation. Findings for overall levels of disordered eating were very similar to those obtained in previous work, with significantly increased genetic effects in girls at more advanced pubertal development. Importantly, these same pubertal increases in genetic influences were observed for body dissatisfaction and weight/shape concerns. However, no pubertal moderation of genetic effects was observed for weight preoccupation; instead, pubertal moderation of nonshared and shared environmental effects was observed. Our findings point to differences in the extent to which genetic and environmental factors contribute to various cognitive body weight and shape symptoms during puberty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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21. Estrogen moderation of genetic influences on eating disorder symptoms during gonadarche in girls: Specific effects on binge eating.
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Rolan, Emily P., Mikhail, Megan E., Culbert, Kristen M., Burt, S. Alexandra, and Klump, Kelly L.
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BINGE-eating disorder , *COMPULSIVE eating , *EATING disorders , *ESTROGEN , *SYMPTOMS , *GIRLS , *TEENAGE girls , *IMPOTENCE - Abstract
The heritability of eating disorder (ED) symptoms increases dramatically across gonadarche in girls. Past studies suggest these developmental differences could be due to pubertal activation of estrogen, but findings have been limited to only one ED symptom (i.e., binge eating). The current study examined whether estrogen contributes to gonadarcheal differences in genetic influences on overall levels of ED symptoms as well as key cognitive symptoms (i.e., weight/shape concerns) that are present across all EDs and are early risk factors for eating pathology. Given that binge eating frequently co-occurs with all of these symptoms, analyses also examined whether estrogen effects exist for overall levels of ED symptoms and body weight/shape concerns after accounting for the known effects of estrogen on genetic risk for binge eating. Participants included 964 female twins (ages 8–16) from the Michigan State University Twin Registry. Overall levels of ED symptoms were assessed with the Minnesota Eating Behavior Survey (MEBS) total score. Weight/shape concerns were assessed with a latent factor modeled using subscales from the MEBS and the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire. Estradiol levels were assessed with saliva samples. Twin moderation models were used to examine whether genetic influences on overall levels of ED symptoms and weight/shape concerns differed significantly across estradiol levels. Although initial models suggested modest differences in genetic influences on overall levels of ED symptoms across estradiol levels, these effects were eliminated when binge eating was accounted for in the models. In addition, weight/shape concerns did not show significant moderation of genetic influences by estradiol in models with or without binge eating. Taken together, results are significant in suggesting that individual differences in estradiol levels during gonadarche have a unique and specific impact on genetic risk for binge eating, while other etiologic factors must contribute to increased heritability of cognitive ED symptoms during this key developmental period in girls. • Heritability of eating disorder (ED) symptoms increases across gonadarche in girls. • Estrogen activation contributes to these increases for binge eating (BE). • Findings suggest some effects of estrogen on heritability of other ED symptoms. • However, these effects were eliminated when controlling for BE. • Estrogen uniquely impacts genetic influences on BE during gonadarche in girls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Interaction of hormonal and social environments in understanding body image concerns in adolescent girls.
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Forney, K. Jean, Keel, Pamela K., O'Connor, Shannon, Sisk, Cheryl, Burt, S. Alexandra, and Klump, Kelly L.
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BODY image , *PEER pressure , *TEENAGE girls , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL context , *GIRLS - Abstract
Abstract During adolescence, peer approval becomes increasingly important and may be perceived as contingent upon appearance in girls. Concurrently, girls experience hormonal changes, including an increase in progesterone. Progesterone has been implicated in affiliative behavior but inconsistently associated with body image concerns. The current study sought to examine whether progesterone may moderate the association between perceived social pressures to conform to the thin ideal and body image concerns. Secondary analyses were conducted in cross-sectional data from 813 girls in early puberty and beyond (ages 8–16) who completed assessments of the peer environment, body image concerns, and progesterone. Models for mediation and moderation were examined with BMI, age, and menarcheal status as covariates. Belief that popularity was linked to appearance and the experience of weight-related teasing were both positively associated with greater body image concerns, but neither was associated with progesterone once adjusting for covariates. Progesterone significantly interacted with perceived social pressures in predicting body image concerns. At higher progesterone levels, appearance-popularity beliefs and weight-related teasing were more strongly related to body image concerns than they were at lower progesterone levels. Findings support a moderating role for progesterone in the link between social pressures and body image concerns in girls. This study adds to a growing literature examining how girls' hormonal environments may modulate responses to their social environments. Longitudinal and experimental work is needed to understand temporal relations and mechanisms behind these associations. Highlights • Both the peer environment and hormones may contribute to body image concerns. • Progesterone moderates the association between peer approval and body image. • Higher progesterone levels may raise vulnerability to peer influence on body image. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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23. Preliminary evidence of sex differences in behavioral and neural responses to palatable food reward in rats.
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Sinclair, Elaine B., Hildebrandt, Britny A., Culbert, Kristen M., Klump, Kelly L., and Sisk, Cheryl L.
- Subjects
- *
EATING disorders , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *COMPULSIVE eating , *ROBUST control , *LABORATORY rats - Abstract
The female bias in eating disorder prevalence is the largest in all of psychiatry. Binge eating on palatable food (PF) is a core, maladaptive symptom that cuts across all major types of eating disorders and can be studied via animal models. Using an individual differences rat model of binge eating that identifies binge eating prone (BEP) and binge eating resistant (BER) phenotypes, we previously showed that, compared with males, females consume more PF and are more likely to be classified as BEP. One potential explanation for this sex difference is that PF is inherently more rewarding to females, leading to higher rates of binge eating. Here we tested the hypothesis that females have more robust behavioral and neural responses to PF reward than males. Adult male ( N = 18) and female ( N = 17) Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to the Conditioned Place Preference paradigm using PF as the unconditioned stimulus. Select males ( N = 9) and females ( N = 9) were video-recorded during three of the PF-paired conditioning sessions to score feeding behavior. Following CPP, 13 male and 12 female rats were exposed to PF just prior to sacrifice to induce expression of the neural activation marker Fos, and Fos expression was quantified in mesocorticolimbic, hypothalamic, and amygdalar circuits. In the CPP paradigm, females displayed a more robust shift in preference for the chamber paired with PF compared with males, and behavioral analyses revealed that average duration of individual feeding bouts during pairing sessions was longer in females than in males. Fos expression was significantly higher in females vs. males in select regions of the mesocorticolimbic reward circuit, with no sex differences in hypothalamic or amygdalar regions. These results provide initial evidence that PF may be more rewarding to females than to males, possibly due to heightened responsiveness of neural substrates that mediate the hedonic and motivational responses to PF, which in part, may underlie sex differences in binge eating proneness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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24. The organizational role of ovarian hormones during puberty on risk for binge-like eating in rats.
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Hildebrandt, Britny A., Lee, Jenna R., Culbert, Kristen M., Sisk, Cheryl L., Johnson, Alexander W., and Klump, Kelly L.
- Subjects
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COMPULSIVE eating , *BINGE-eating disorder , *REWARD (Psychology) , *PUBERTY - Abstract
• After puberty, binge eating prevalence is greater in females than males. • Ovarian hormones play a key role in female preponderance of binge eating. • Pubertal estrogens likely exert organizational effects on female binge eating risk. • Pubertal estrogens may program binge eating risk in adulthood via reward pathways. Puberty is a high-risk period for the development of dysregulated eating, including binge eating. While risk for binge eating in animals and humans increases in both males and females during puberty, the increased prevalence is significantly greater in females. Emerging data suggest that the organizational effects of gonadal hormones may contribute to the female preponderance of binge eating. In this narrative review, we discuss studies conducted in animals that have examined these organizational effects as well as the neural systems that may serve as intermediary mechanisms. Relatively few studies have been conducted, but data thus far suggest that pubertal estrogens may organize risk for binge eating, potentially by altering key circuits in brain reward pathways. These promising results highlight the need for future studies to directly test organizational effects of pubertal hormones using hormone replacement techniques and circuit-level manipulations that can identify pathways contributing to binge eating across development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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25. A systematic review and secondary data analysis of the interactions between the serotonin transporter 5-HTTLPR polymorphism and environmental and psychological factors in eating disorders.
- Author
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Rozenblat, Vanja, Ong, Deborah, Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, Matthew, Akkermann, Kirsti, Collier, David, Engels, Rutger C.M.E., Fernandez-Aranda, Fernando, Harro, Jaanus, Homberg, Judith R., Karwautz, Andreas, Kiive, Evelyn, Klump, Kelly L., Larson, Christine L., Racine, Sarah E., Richardson, Jodie, Steiger, Howard, Stoltenberg, Scott F., van Strien, Tatjana, Wagner, Gudrun, and Treasure, Janet
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SEROTONIN transporters , *EATING disorders , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *GENETIC research , *DATA analysis , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Objectives To summarize and synthesize the growing gene x environment (GxE) research investigating the promoter region of the serotonin transporter gene (5-HTTLPR) in the eating disorders (ED) field, and overcome the common limitation of low sample size, by undertaking a systematic review followed by a secondary data meta-analysis of studies identified by the review. Method A systematic review of articles using PsycINFO, PubMed, and EMBASE was undertaken to identify studies investigating the interaction between 5-HTTLPR and an environmental or psychological factor, with an ED-related outcome variable. Seven studies were identified by the systematic review, with complete data sets of five community ( n = 1750, 64.5% female) and two clinical ( n = 426, 100% female) samples combined to perform four secondary-data analyses: 5-HTTLPR x Traumatic Life Events to predict ED status ( n = 909), 5-HTTLPR x Sexual and Physical Abuse to predict bulimic symptoms ( n = 1097), 5-HTTLPR x Depression to predict bulimic symptoms ( n = 1256), and 5-HTTLPR x Impulsiveness to predict disordered eating ( n = 1149). Results Under a multiplicative model, the low function (s) allele of 5-HTTLPR interacted with traumatic life events and experiencing both sexual and physical abuse (but not only one) to predict increased likelihood of an ED and bulimic symptoms, respectively. However, under an additive model there was also an interaction between sexual and physical abuse considered independently and 5-HTTLPR, and no interaction with traumatic life events. No other GxE interactions were significant. Conclusion Early promising results should be followed-up with continued cross-institutional collaboration in order to achieve the large sample sizes necessary for genetic research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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26. Examining a window of vulnerability for affective symptoms in the mid-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle.
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Guevarra, Darwin A., Louis, Courtney C., Gloe, Lilianne M., Block, Stefanie Russman, Kashy, Deborah A., Klump, Kelly L., and Moser, Jason S.
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- *
MENSTRUAL cycle , *MENSTRUATION disorders , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL depression , *LARGE-scale brain networks - Abstract
Particular phases of the menstrual cycle may exacerbate affective symptoms for females with a diagnosed mental health disorder. However, there are mixed findings regarding whether affective symptoms change across the menstrual cycle in females without a clinical diagnosis. The window of vulnerability model proposes that natural increases in ovarian hormones in the mid-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle lead to systematic changes in brain networks associated with affective processing. Consequently, the model posits that females may experience stress more intensely and remember negative events more readily in the mid-luteal phase, increasing their risk for higher affective symptoms. Using a 35-day longitudinal study design, we tested the window of vulnerability model in a non-clinical sample. We tracked naturally cycling females' daily stress and three types of affective symptoms: anxious apprehension, anxious arousal, and anhedonic depression. Using multilevel modeling, we simultaneously modeled within- and between-person associations among stress and menstrual phase for each affective symptom. We found increased anhedonic depression in the mid-luteal phase but not anxious apprehension or anxious arousal. Moreover, we detected a positive association between within- and between-person stress and anxious apprehension and anhedonic depression, but not anxious arousal. These associations were not stronger in the mid-luteal phase. Overall, we provide weak evidence for a window of vulnerability for affective symptoms in the mid-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. Our findings suggest that stress is a better predictor of fluctuations in affective symptoms than the menstrual cycle. Moreover, our findings highlight the importance of measuring multiple negative affective symptoms because they may be differentially related to stress and the menstrual cycle. • Females report an increase in depression symptoms in the mid-luteal phase. • Anxious symptoms do not fluctuate with the menstrual cycle. • Stress is positively associated with anxious apprehension and anhedonic depression. • Mid-luteal phase does not increase the stress and affective symptoms relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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27. Differential mesocorticolimbic responses to palatable food in binge eating prone and binge eating resistant female rats.
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Sinclair, Elaine B., Culbert, Kristen M., Gradl, Dana R., Richardson, Kimberlei A., Klump, Kelly L., and Sisk, Cheryl L.
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- *
PREFRONTAL cortex , *EATING disorders , *BULIMIA , *NUCLEUS accumbens , *NEUROBIOLOGY , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Binge eating is a key symptom of many eating disorders (e.g. binge eating disorder, bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa binge/purge type), yet the neurobiological underpinnings of binge eating are poorly understood. The mesocorticolimbic reward circuit, including the nucleus accumbens and the medial prefrontal cortex, is likely involved because this circuit mediates the hedonic value and incentive salience of palatable foods (PF). Here we tested the hypothesis that higher propensity for binge eating is associated with a heightened response (i.e., Fos induction) of the nucleus accumbens and medial prefrontal cortex to PF, using an animal model that identifies binge eating prone (BEP) and binge eating resistant (BER) rats. Forty adult female Sprague–Dawley rats were given intermittent access to PF (high fat pellets) 3 ×/week for 3 weeks. Based on a pattern of either consistently high or consistently low PF consumption across these feeding tests, 8 rats met criteria for categorization as BEP, and 11 rats met criteria for categorization as BER. One week after the final feeding test, BEP and BER rats were either exposed to PF in their home cages or were given no PF in their home cages for 1 h prior to perfusion, leading to three experimental groups for the Fos analysis: BEPs given PF, BERs given PF, and a No PF control group. The total number of Fos-immunoreactive (Fos-ir) cells in the nucleus accumbens core and shell, and the cingulate, prelimbic, and infralimbic regions of the medial prefrontal cortex was estimated by stereological analysis. PF induced higher Fos expression in the nucleus accumbens shell and core and in the prelimbic and infralimbic cortex of BEP rats compared to No PF controls. Throughout the nucleus accumbens and medial prefrontal cortex, PF induced higher Fos expression in BEP than in BER rats, even after adjusting for differences in PF intake. Differences in the neural activation pattern between BEP and BER rats were more robust in prefrontal cortex than in nucleus accumbens. These data confirm that PF activates brain regions responsible for encoding the incentive salience and hedonic properties of PF, and suggest that binge eating proneness is associated with enhanced responses to PF in brain regions that exert executive control over food reward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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28. The role of leptin, melanocortin, and neurotrophin system genes on body weight in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.
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Yilmaz, Zeynep, Kaplan, Allan S., Tiwari, Arun K., Levitan, Robert D., Piran, Sara, Bergen, Andrew W., Kaye, Walter H., Hakonarson, Hakon, Wang, Kai, Berrettini, Wade H., Brandt, Harry A., Bulik, Cynthia M., Crawford, Steven, Crow, Scott, Fichter, Manfred M., Halmi, Katherine A., Johnson, Craig L., Keel, Pamela K., Klump, Kelly L., and Magistretti, Pierre
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- *
PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of leptin , *MELANOCORTIN receptors , *NEUROTROPHINS , *BODY weight , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *BULIMIA , *BIOMARKERS - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Although low weight is a key factor contributing to the high mortality in anorexia nervosa (AN), it is unclear how AN patients sustain low weight compared with bulimia nervosa (BN) patients with similar psychopathology. Studies of genes involved in appetite and weight regulation in eating disorders have yielded variable findings, in part due to small sample size and clinical heterogeneity. This study: (1) assessed the role of leptin, melanocortin, and neurotrophin genetic variants in conferring risk for AN and BN; and (2) explored the involvement of these genes in body mass index (BMI) variations within AN and BN. Method: Our sample consisted of 745 individuals with AN without a history of BN, 245 individuals with BN without a history of AN, and 321 controls. We genotyped 20 markers with known or putative function among genes selected from leptin, melanocortin, and neurotrophin systems. Results: There were no significant differences in allele frequencies among individuals with AN, BN, and controls. AGRP rs13338499 polymorphism was associated with lowest illness-related BMI in those with AN (p = 0.0013), and NTRK2 rs1042571 was associated with highest BMI in those with BN (p = 0.0018). Discussion: To our knowledge, this is the first study to address the issue of clinical heterogeneity in eating disorder genetic research and to explore the role of known or putatively functional markers in genes regulating appetite and weight in individuals with AN and BN. If replicated, our results may serve as an important first step toward gaining a better understanding of weight regulation in eating disorders. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
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29. Individual differences in the relationship between ovarian hormones and emotional eating across the menstrual cycle: A role for personality?
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Racine, Sarah E., Keel, Pamela K., Burt, S. Alexandra, Sisk, Cheryl L., Neale, Michael, Boker, Steven, and Klump, Kelly L.
- Subjects
- *
INDIVIDUAL differences , *EMOTIONS , *MENSTRUAL cycle , *PROGESTERONE , *ESTRADIOL , *PERSONALITY , *SELF-evaluation - Abstract
Abstract: Within-person changes in estradiol and progesterone predict changes in binge eating tendencies across the menstrual cycle. However, all women have menstrual-cycle fluctuations in hormones, but few experience binge eating. Personality traits may be critical individual difference factors that influence who will engage in emotional eating in the presence of a vulnerable hormonal environment. Women (N=239) provided self-reports of emotional eating and saliva samples for hormone measurement for 45 consecutive days. Negative urgency and negative emotionality were measured once and were examined as moderators of hormone-emotional eating associations. Consistent with prior research, within-person changes in the interaction between estradiol and progesterone predicted emotional eating. Neither negative urgency nor negative emotionality interacted with changes in estradiol and progesterone to predict changes in emotional eating. Additional factors, other than the two personality traits examined, may account for individual differences in within-person associations between hormones and emotional eating. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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30. Temporal sequence of comorbid alcohol use disorder and anorexia nervosa
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Baker, Jessica H., Thornton, Laura M., Strober, Michael, Brandt, Harry, Crawford, Steve, Fichter, Manfred M., Halmi, Katherine A., Johnson, Craig, Jones, Ian, Kaplan, Allan S., Klump, Kelly L., Mitchell, James E., Treasure, Janet, Woodside, D. Blake, Berrettini, Wade H., Kaye, Walter H., and Bulik, Cynthia M.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism , *COMORBIDITY , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *SUBSTANCE-induced disorders , *SYMPTOMS , *BORDERLINE personality disorder , *DISEASE risk factors ,ALCOHOL drinking risk factors - Abstract
Abstract: Women with eating disorders have a significantly higher prevalence of substance use disorders than the general population. The goal of the current study was to assess the temporal pattern of comorbid anorexia nervosa (AN) and alcohol use disorder (AUD) and the impact this ordering has on symptomatology and associated features. Women were placed into one of three groups based on the presence or absence of comorbid AUD and the order of AN and AUD onset in those with both disorders: (1) AN Only, (2) AN First, and (3) AUD First. The groups were compared on psychological symptoms and personality characteristics often associated with AN, AUD, or both using general linear models. Twenty-one percent of women (n =161) with AN reported a history of AUD with 115 reporting AN onset first and 35 reporting AUD onset first. Women with binge-eating and/or purging type AN were significantly more likely to have AUD. In general, differences were found only between women with AN Only and women with AN and AUD regardless of order of emergence. Women with AN and AUD had higher impulsivity scores and higher prevalence of depression and borderline personality disorder than women with AN Only. Women with AN First scored higher on traits commonly associated with AN, whereas women with comorbid AN and AUD displayed elevations in traits more commonly associated with AUD. Results do not indicate a distinct pattern of symptomatology in comorbid AN and AUD based on the temporal sequence of the disorders. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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31. Childhood anxiety associated with low BMI in women with Anorexia Nervosa
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Dellava, Jocilyn E., Thornton, Laura M., Hamer, Robert M., Strober, Michael, Plotnicov, Katherine, Klump, Kelly L., Brandt, Harry, Crawford, Steve, Fichter, Manfred M., Halmi, Katherine A., Jones, Ian, Johnson, Craig, Kaplan, Allan S., LaVia, Maria, Mitchell, James, Rotondo, Alessandro, Treasure, Janet, Woodside, D. Blake, Berrettini, Wade H., and Kaye, Walter H.
- Subjects
- *
ANXIETY in children , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *BODY mass index , *DEATH , *PROGNOSIS , *EXERCISE , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *DISEASES in women - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Extremely low body mass index (BMI) values are associated with increased risk for death and poor long-term prognosis in individuals with anorexia nervosa (AN). The present study explores childhood personality characteristics that could be associated with the ability to attain an extremely low BMI. Methods: Participants were 326 women from the Genetics of Anorexia Nervosa (GAN) Study who completed the Structured Interview for Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimic Syndromes and whose mother completed the Child Behavioral Checklist and/or Revised Dimensions of Temperament Survey. Results: Children who were described as having greater fear or anxiety by their mothers attained lower BMIs during AN (p < 0.02). Path analysis in the GAN and a validation sample, Price Foundation Anorexia Nervosa Trios Study, confirmed the relation between early childhood anxiety, caloric restriction, qualitative food item restriction, excessive exercise, and low BMI. Path analysis also confirmed a relation between childhood anxiety and caloric restriction, which mediated the relation between childhood anxiety and low BMI in the GAN sample only. Conclusion: Fearful or anxious behavior as a child was associated with the attainment of low BMI in AN and childhood anxiety was associated with caloric restriction. Measures of anxiety and factors associated with anxiety-proneness in childhood may index children at risk for restrictive behaviors and extremely low BMIs in AN. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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32. The possible influence of impulsivity and dietary restraint on associations between serotonin genes and binge eating
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Racine, Sarah E., Culbert, Kristen M., Larson, Christine L., and Klump, Kelly L.
- Subjects
- *
GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *MOLECULAR genetics , *SEROTONIN , *GENES , *BULIMIA , *COMPULSIVE eating , *ETIOLOGY of diseases , *GENETIC polymorphisms - Abstract
Abstract: Although serotonin (5-HT) genes are thought to be involved in the etiology of bulimia nervosa and binge eating, findings from molecular genetic studies are inconclusive. This may be due to limitations of past research, such as a failure to consider the influence of quantitative traits and gene–environment interactions. The current study investigated these issues by examining whether quantitative traits (i.e., impulsivity) and environmental exposure factors (i.e., dietary restraint) moderate 5-HT gene/binge eating associations in a sample of young women (N =344). Binge eating was assessed using the Minnesota Eating Behavior Survey and the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire (DEBQ). Impulsivity was assessed with the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale-Version 11. Dietary restraint was measured with a factor score derived from common restraint scales. Saliva samples were genotyped for the 5-HT2a receptor T102C polymorphism and 5-HT transporter promoter polymorphism. As expected, impulsivity and dietary restraint were associated with binge eating. Although the T allele of the 5-HT2a receptor gene and the s allele of the 5-HTT gene were associated with higher levels of impulsivity, there were no main effects of 5-HT genotypes on any binge eating measure, and interactions between genotypes, impulsivity, and dietary restraint were non-significant. In conclusion, we found no evidence to suggest that dietary restraint or impulsivity moderate associations between binge eating and these 5-HT genes. Future research should continue to explore interaction effects by examining larger samples, assessing dietary intake directly, and investigating other genes, traits, and environmental factors that may be related to binge eating and bulimia nervosa. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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33. Negative affect as a mediator of the relationship between weight-based teasing and binge eating in adolescent girls
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Suisman, Jessica L., Slane, Jennifer D., Burt, S. Alexandra, and Klump, Kelly L.
- Subjects
- *
COMPULSIVE eating , *BODY weight , *JOKING relationships , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
Abstract: Previous research has established a link between weight-based teasing and binge eating, though the precise mechanisms that drive this relationship remain unknown. This study examined negative affect as a mediator of the relationship between weight-based teasing and binge eating. Participants included 265 adolescent female twins (aged 10–15 years). Self-report measures assessed binge eating, weight-based teasing, and negative affect. Mediation was tested within hierarchical linear models to control for the non-independence of the twin data. Significant positive associations were observed between binge eating, teasing, and negative affect. In the regression analyses, negative affect partially mediated associations between weight-based teasing and binge eating. Results suggest that increases in negative affect are one way in which weight-based teasing leads to binge eating in girls. Future studies should examine additional mediators and assess possible clinical applications of these findings. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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34. Features associated with diet pill use in individuals with eating disorders
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Reba-Harrelson, Lauren, Von Holle, Ann, Thornton, Laura M., Klump, Kelly L., Berrettini, Wade H., Brandt, Harry, Crawford, Steven, Crow, Scott, Fichter, Manfred M., Goldman, David, Halmi, Katherine A., Johnson, Craig, Kaplan, Allan S., Keel, Pamela, LaVia, Maria, Mitchell, James, Plotnicov, Katherine, Rotondo, Alessandro, Strober, Michael, and Treasure, Janet
- Subjects
- *
APPETITE depressants , *APPETITE disorders , *BODY weight , *ANXIETY disorders - Abstract
Abstract: We investigated the relation between diet pill use and eating disorder subtype, purging and other compensatory behaviors, body mass index (BMI), tobacco and caffeine use, alcohol abuse or dependence, personality characteristics, and Axis I and Axis II disorders in 1,345 participants from the multisite Price Foundation Genetics Studies. Diet pill use was significantly less common in women with restricting type of AN than in women with other eating disorder subtypes. In addition, diet pill use was associated with the use of multiple weight control behaviors, higher BMI, higher novelty seeking, and the presence of anxiety disorders, alcohol abuse or dependence, and borderline personality disorder. Findings suggest that certain clinical and personality variables distinguish individuals with eating disorders who use diet pills from those who do not. In the eating disorder population, vigilant screening for diet pill use should be routine clinical practice. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Personality in men with eating disorders
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Woodside, D. Blake, Bulik, Cynthia M., Thornton, Laura, Klump, Kelly L., Tozzi, Federica, Fichter, Manfred M., Halmi, Katherine A., Kaplan, Allan S., Strober, Michael, Devlin, Bernie, Bacanu, Silviu-Alin, Ganjei, Kelly, Crow, Scott, Mitchell, James, Rotondo, Alessandro, Mauri, Mauro, Cassano, Giovanni, Keel, Pamela, Berrettini, Wade H., and Kaye, Walter H.
- Subjects
- *
PERSONALITY , *EATING disorders , *APPETITE disorders ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
Objective: This study compares personality variables of men with eating disorders to women with eating disorders.Method: Data were obtained from an international study of the genetics of eating disorders. Forty-two male participants were age-band matched at 1:2 ratio to females from the same study. Personality features were compared between males and females controlling for diagnostic subgroup.Results: Males with eating disorders appear to be slightly less at risk for perfectionism, harm avoidance, reward dependence, and cooperativeness than females. Few differences were found when diagnostic subgroup was considered.Conclusion: Observed differences in personality variables may help explain the difference in incidence and prevalence of eating disorders in men and women. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
36. Examining the role of ovarian hormones in the association between worry and working memory across the menstrual cycle.
- Author
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Gloe, Lilianne M., Kashy, Deborah A., Jacobs, Emily G., Klump, Kelly L., and Moser, Jason S.
- Subjects
- *
SHORT-term memory , *MENSTRUAL cycle , *COGNITION , *MEMORY testing , *WORRY - Abstract
Previous research indicates that worry is associated with poorer working memory performance. Moreover, prior work demonstrates that estradiol relates to both worry and working memory performance. In the present study, we sought to further examine interrelations between worry, estradiol and working memory by testing whether estradiol moderates the association between worry and working memory in females. We hypothesized that worry would be associated with poorer working memory performance at higher levels of estradiol. We also conducted exploratory analyses to examine the role of progesterone as a moderator of the association between worry and working memory. Participants were 97 naturally-cycling females who attended four lab sessions across their menstrual cycles. Consistent with predictions, higher average levels of worry were associated with lower working memory accuracy on particularly difficult trials when average levels of estradiol were also high. The same association between higher worry and lower working memory accuracy emerged when average levels of progesterone were high. Findings highlight the importance of considering ovarian hormones in future studies and current theories of anxiety and cognition. • High average worry related to worse N -back accuracy under high mean estradiol. • High average worry related to worse N -back accuracy under high mean progesterone. • Worry and ovarian hormones only related to N -back accuracy at high task difficulty. • Cognitive impacts of anxiety in females vary as a function of ovarian hormones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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37. Does the tripartite influence model of body image and eating pathology function similarly across racial/ethnic groups of White, Black, Latina, and Asian women?
- Author
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Burke, Natasha L., Schaefer, Lauren M., Karvay, Yvette G., Bardone-Cone, Anna M., Frederick, David A., Schaumberg, Katherine, Klump, Kelly L., Anderson, Drew A., and Thompson, J. Kevin
- Subjects
- *
ASIANS , *ETHNIC groups , *BODY image , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *ETHNIC differences - Abstract
The tripartite influence model suggests that appearance pressures from family, peers, and the media contribute to thin-ideal internalization, which leads to increased body dissatisfaction and subsequent eating disorder pathology. The tripartite influence model was initially developed and tested among primarily White samples, and emerging research suggests racial/ethnic differences in mean levels of particular model constructs. Consequently, the model's appropriateness for understanding eating disorder risk in racial/ethnic minorities warrants investigation to determine its usefulness in explicating eating disorder risk in diverse populations. Participants in the current study were White (n = 1167), Black (n = 212), Latina (n = 203), and Asian (n = 176) women from five geographically disparate college campuses in the United States. Participants completed the Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Appearance Questionnaire-4, the Multidimensional Body-Self Relations Questionnaire - Appearance Evaluation Subscale, and the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire. Analysis of variance was used to compare mean levels of each construct across racial/ethnic groups. Multigroup structural equation modeling was used to assess the appropriateness of the tripartite influence model for each racial/ethnic group, and to examine differences in the strength of the model pathways across groups. There were significant mean level differences across groups for most model constructs. However, results indicated similar model fit across racial/ethnic groups, with few differences in the strength of model pathways. Findings suggest that although some groups report lower levels of proposed risk factors, the sociocultural risk processes for eating pathology identified through the tripartite influence model are similar across racial/ethnic groups of young adult women. Such information can be used to inform culturally-sensitive interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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