| Literature DB >> 26772802 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a debilitating, sometimes fatal eating disorder (ED) whereby restraint of appetite and emotion is concomitant with an inflexible, attention-to-detail perfectionist cognitive style and obsessive-compulsive behaviour. Intriguingly, people with AN are less likely to engage in substance use, whereas those who suffer from an ED with a bingeing component are more vulnerable to substance use disorder (SUD). DISCUSSION: This insight into a beneficial consequence of appetite control in those with AN, which is shrouded by the many other unhealthy, excessive and deficit symptoms, may provide some clues as to how the brain could be trained to exert better, sustained control over appetitive and impulsive processes. Structural and functional brain imaging studies implicate the executive control network (ECN) and the salience network (SN) in the neuropathology of AN and SUD. Additionally, excessive employment of working memory (WM), alongside more prominent cognitive deficits may be utilised to cope with the experience of negative emotions and may account for aberrant brain function. WM enables mental rehearsal of cognitive strategies while regulating, restricting or avoiding neural responses associated with the SN. Therefore, high versus low WM capacity may be one of the factors that unites common cognitive and behavioural symptoms in those suffering from AN and SUD respectively. Furthermore, emerging evidence suggests that by evoking neural plasticity in the ECN and SN with WM training, improvements in neurocognitive function and cognitive control can be achieved. Thus, considering the neurocognitive processes of excessive appetite control and how it links to WM in AN may aid the application of adjunctive treatment for SUD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26772802 PMCID: PMC4715338 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-0714-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1The original working memory model by Baddeley [1]. Reproduced via open access Wikimedia: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Working-memory-en.svg
Fig. 2Bernie Baars’ Global Workspace Model incorporating working memory. Reproduced with permission via email communication from Professor Bernard Baars
Fig. 3Greg Gandenberger’s Bayesian Probabilistic Inference Model to explain how Bayesianism provides guidance for belief or action, particularly under conditions of uncertainty. Reproduced with permission via email from Gregory Gandenberger(http://gandenberger.org/category/philosophy-of-science/bayesianism/). 1) Likelihoodism is based on a belief system that an outcome will occur. 2) Frequentism is based on prior experience and the probability that an event will occur; 3) Bayesianism is based on updating belief system via frequency of exposure, and informs action tendencies in the presence of uncertainty
Chronological list of studies examining working memory in people with AN
| Author | Participants | Type of WM task | Brain imaging | Main findings | ED symptoms and WM findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Israel et al. (2015) [ | Female adults with ED: | N-back task with variable cognitive load (arithmetic) and stress (positive and negative feedback) | fMRI (1.5 T) | ED-R performed consistently better than the ED-BP group on all N-back versions. Further, the ED-R group had increased right DLPFC and premotor cortex activation during the 2-back vs. 0-back task in comparison to ED-BP. ED-BP had weaker WM activation than ED-R. | Binge ED symptoms are associated with worse WM performance whereas restricting ED symptoms are associated with better WM performance. Right posterior prefrontal cortex activation is weaker during WM in those with binge ED. Age, BMI, Education influenced these findings, whereas anti-depressant medication and chronicity of illness did not. |
| Weider et al. (2015) [ | Female adults with ED: | Working Memory Index (WAIS-III Manual): Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT) 3, PASAT 2, WAIS-III (Letter Number Sequencing, | None | The AN group had lower WM scores than both BN and HC. | Lowest lifetime BMI and depressive symptoms explained the worse WM performance in the BN group but not the AN group. |
| Lao-Kaim et al. (2014) [ | Female adults with ED: | N-back task (0, 1, 2 and 3 back). The authors’ specifically examine verbal WM, incorporating the phonological loop, the phonological store, sub-vocal rehearsal and the central executive. | fMRI (1.5 T) | No significant difference in WM task performance. | Duration of illness may be associated with lower WM accuracy in the AN group. However, anxiety and depression scores were not shown to influence WM ability in AN. |
| Kothari et al. (2013) [ | Male and female 10 yr old children of mothers with ED (n = 6192) | The counting span task - a | None. | Increased WM capacity in children with mothers of AN compared to those whose mothers did not have a history of AN (e.g. those with BN or non-ED mothers). | Higher maternal education level and child IQ level may mediate the effect of better WM scores. |
| Brooks et al. (2012) [ | Female adults: | The N-back task (1-back and 2-back), presented on a computer screen, with additional subliminal images of food, neutral and aversive scenes | None | Females with R-AN were significantly better at the N-back task (fewer total errors), compared to HC. However, their superior performance on the N-back task was compromised only when subliminal images of food were presented. This suggests that subcortical (e.g. non-conscious) processing of food stimuli interfered with WM capacity. | Higher levels of anxiety correlated with number of errors during the WM task in those with R-AN. |
| Pruis et al. (2012) [ | Female adults: | Memoranda arrow was shown, followed by a distracting image of a body (negative, neutral, positive or scrambled), and then another arrow. Participants were instructed to indicate whether the second arrow presentation was in the same orientation as the first. | fMRI (3 T) | HC and recovered AN wormen did not differ on the WM task overall. Additionally, body images that were rated as negative were more disruptive to WM processes in both groups, but presentation of other distracting body images had no effect on WM. Amygdala and fusiform | More years recovered may have had an influence on negative ratings of bodies and activation levels in the amygdala. |
| Nikendei et al. (2011) [ | Female adults: | Wechsler Memory Scale Revised (WMS-R) – Digit span backwards. | None. | Currently ill and weight-restored | ED symptoms or comorbidities did not correlate with WM performance. |
| Hatch et al. (2010) [ | Female adolescents | IntegNeuro-computerized | None. | During underweight status, AN patients had superior WM capacity in comparison to HC. | ED symptoms or comorbidities did not correlate with WM performance. |
| Dickson et al. (2008) [ | Female adults: | The N-back task (1-back and 2-back), presented on a computer screen, with additional subliminal and supraliminal images of food, neutral and aversive scenes | None. | Participants with AN had superior WM performance compared to the HC during the subliminal condition, but were more distracted than HC by the supraliminal condition. | Duration of illness correlated positively with number of errors made by the AN group. |
| Fowler et al. (2006) [ | Female adults: | Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB). Spatial WM is a test of spatial working memory | None. | No impairments were observed in spatial WM. | ED symptoms or comorbidities did not correlate with WM performance. |
| Seed et al. (2002) [ | Female adults: | Spatial WM as part of a test battery. A picture of a house is presented for 5 s. The house has | None. | WM performance was impaired in females with AN compared to HC, but cortisol levels did not differ between groups. | ED symptoms or comorbidities did not correlate with WM performance. |
WM working memory, AN anorexia nervosa, BN bulimia nervosa, ED-R eating disorder restricting type, ED-BP eating disorder binge-purge type, BMI Body Mass Index, IQ Intelligence Quotient, fMRI functional magnetic resonance imaging, DLPFC dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, IPL inferior parietal lobe, IFG inferior frontal gyrus, R-AN restricting anorexia nervosa, BP-AN binge-purge restricting anorexia nervosa; 5 studies reported BETTER WM performance in AN compared to HC; 2 studies reported WORSE WM peformance and 4 studies reported NO DIFFERENCE. 3 studies to date have examined neural function in relation to WM performance in those with AN
Fig. 4Neurobiological impulse-control model of temperamental dominance in ED [18]OCPD = Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder; DLPFC = dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; OFC = orbitofrontal cortex; MPFC = medial prefrontal cortex; ACC = anterior cingulate cortex; COMT = catechol-o-methyltransferase; BDNF = Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor; 5HT2A = 5-Hydroxy-Tryptophan-2A
Fig. 5A model of cognitive control of appetite. a The original Yerkes-Dodson Law [76], showing that optimal performance occurs when medium arousal is present, but that both low and high arousal can be detrimental to performance. Reproduced via open access Wikimedia: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Yerkes-Dodson_wet.png; b) Updated model to depict cognitive control of appetite, applicable to restricting anorexia nervosa and addictive behaviours such as SUD and binge eating. Low appetitive processes (e.g. due to satiation with substance/food or hijacked by negative emotion such as anxiety or anger) coincide with low cognitive control. High appetitive processes (e.g. reward sensitivity, real or perceived) coincide with low cognitive control because either reward responses impinge on executive functioning or executive functioning is overloaded. Optimal cognitive control (e.g. self-regulation and effective cognitive-emotion neural interactions) is suggested to occur when appetitive drive is within the medium range
Fig. 6Brain regions most implicated in addiction. a Prefrontal cortex volume is shown to be reduced in those with SUD, produced via unpublished data with permission from Dr Samantha Brooks; b) A cartoon of the basal ganglia, associated with arousal, motivation, primary process affective states. Together, the prefrontal cortex and areas of the basal ganglia form the cortico-striatal pathway, which is implicated in the neuropathology of SUD and AN