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The interactive effects of estrogen and progesterone on changes in emotional eating across the menstrual cycle

Authors :
Sarah E. Racine
Cheryl L. Sisk
Michael C. Neale
Pamela K. Keel
Steven M. Boker
Kelly L. Klump
Jean Yueqin Hu
S. Alexandra Burt
Source :
Journal of Abnormal Psychology. 122:131-137
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2013.

Abstract

Studies suggest that within-person changes in estrogen and progesterone predict changes in binge eating across the menstrual cycle. However, samples have been extremely small (maximum N = 9), and analyses have not examined the interactive effects of hormones that are critical for changes in food intake in animals. The aims of the current study were to examine ovarian hormone interactions in the prediction of within-subject changes in emotional eating in the largest sample of women to date (N = 196). Participants provided daily ratings of emotional eating and saliva samples for hormone measurement for 45 consecutive days. Results confirmed that changes in ovarian hormones predict changes in emotional eating across the menstrual cycle, with a significant estradiol x progesterone interaction. Emotional eating scores were highest during the mid-luteal phase, when progesterone peaks and estradiol demonstrates a secondary peak. Findings extend previous work by highlighting significant interactions between estrogen and progesterone that explain mid-luteal increases in emotional eating. Future work should explore mechanisms (e.g., gene-hormone interactions) that contribute to both within- and between-subject differences in emotional eating.

Details

ISSN :
19391846 and 0021843X
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Abnormal Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....934d60725ca363b2c878f69aeac0a11b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/a0029524