| Literature DB >> 29468065 |
Brooke Donnelly1, Stephen Touyz1, Phillipa Hay2, Amy Burton1, Janice Russell3, Ian Caterson4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: In recent decades there has been growing interest in the use of neuroimaging techniques to explore the structural and functional brain changes that take place in those with eating disorders. However, to date, the majority of research has focused on patients with anorexia nervosa. This systematic review addresses a gap in the literature by providing an examination of the published literature on the neurobiology of individuals who binge eat; specifically, individuals with bulimia nervosa (BN) and binge eating disorder (BED).Entities:
Keywords: binge eating; binge eating disorder; binge episode; bulimia nervosa; eating disorders; fMRI; neurobiology; neuroimaging
Year: 2018 PMID: 29468065 PMCID: PMC5819247 DOI: 10.1186/s40337-018-0187-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eat Disord ISSN: 2050-2974
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart of study identification and inclusion
Characteristics and key findings of included studies using MRI as the primary method
| Authors & Journal | Participants | Mean age (SD) | % Female | Procedure | Psychiatric / other exclusions | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Coutinho et al. (2015) [ | BN (n=21) HCs ( | BN: 31.57 (8.27) | 100% | One resting-state MRI | Substance abuse disorder; suicidal ideation; Axis I disorder other than eating disorder; psychotropic medication with the exception of anxiolytics and antidepressants | Volume reduction in the CN within the frontostriatal circuit in BN compared to HCs |
| 2. Doraiswamy et al. (1990) [ | BN ( | BN: 24 (2.5) | 100% | One resting-state MRI | Major affective disorder | AN & BN vs HCs: smaller pituitary gland area and heights |
| 3. Galusca et al. (2014) [ | BN-P* (n=9) HCs (n=11) | BN-P: Only the age range (18-30y) was reported. No mean or SD. | 100% | MRI and PET completed 2h following lunch | Chronic or congenital disease; alcohol, tobacco or drug consumption; previous or current diagnosis of AN-R; medication | BN vs HCs: increased binding potential in four clusters in the brain: Insula and transverse temporal cortex, operculum, temporo-parietal cortex |
| 4. Hoffman et al. (1989) [ | BN ( | BN:24.1 | 100% | One resting-state MRI | Past diagnosis of AN; current diagnosis of major affective disorder; alcohol abuse | BN vs HCs: cortical atrophy found in the sagittal cerebral / cranio ratio (SCCR) but not in the ventricle:brain ratio (VBR) |
| 5. Hoffman et al. (1990) [ | BN ( | BN 24.3 (3.2) | 100% | One resting-state MRI | Current diagnosis of major affective disorder; alcohol abuse | BN vs HC: Significant decrease in inferior frontal grey matter |
| 6. Husain et al. (1992) [ | BN ( | BN 24.5 (4) | 100% | One resting-state MRI | In the BN group: past diagnosis of AN | AN vs. BN & HCs: Significantly smaller thalamus and midbrain (mesencephalon) area |
| 7. Schäfer et al. (2010) [ | BN-P ( | BN-P: 23.1 (3.8) | 100% | One resting-state MRI to examine structural brain abnormalities. Grey matter volumes (GMV) for specific regions involved in food / reinforcement processing were analysed via voxel-based morphometry: medial / lateral OFC, insula, ACC, ventral / dorsal striatum | Depression; left-handedness; medication | BN vs. BED: greater GMV of medial and lateral orbitofrontal cortex as well as ventral & dorsal striatum |
Characteristics and key findings of included studies using fMRI as the primary method.
| Authors & Journal | Participants | Mean age (SD) | % Female | Method | Psychiatric / other exclusions | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Amianto et al. (2013) [ | AN ( | AN: 20(4) BN: 23(5) HC: 24(3) | 100% | One resting-state fMRI. | Lifetime history of psychosis, schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, delusional disorder, bipolar I/II disorder, psychotic depression, organic mood disorder; severe medical illness; severe underweight that could not be managed as an outpatient; use of psychotropic medication; neurological disease | AN vs BN & HC: grey matter reduction |
| 2. Balodis et al. (2013) [ | Obese BED ( | BED 43.7 (12.7) | BED 73.7% | fMRI completed while completing MIDT (monetary incentive delay task) | In the obese non-BED or HC group: past history of, or current binge eating or other eating disorder diagnosis | Anticipation processing: |
| 3. Bohon & Stice (2011) [ | BN sub-threshold* (1xBE & comp/wk) ( | Not reported per group. | 100% | fMRI examining reward circuitry during actual (choc milkshake) and anticipated (tasteless solution) food intake | Any Axis I disorder; food allergy to milkshake / taste aversion to chocolate milkshake | BN vs HCs: less activation in right precentral gyrus in both anticipatory and consumatory conditions; less activation in right anterior insula while anticipating the milkshake; and less activation in the left middle frontal gyrus, right posterior insula, left thalamus in response to milkshake |
| 4. Brooks et al. (2011) [ | BN ( | BN: 25 (7.1) | 100% | fMRI while asking participants to imagine eating the foods shown in photographs (72 colour photos of high and low energy, sweet & savoury foods; 72 photos of non-food items | Left handedness; caffeine / alcohol within specified times preceding the fMRI; history of head trauma, hearing or visual impairment, neurological disease | In response to food vs. non-food images: |
| 5. Celone et al. (2011) [ | ‘Sub-threshold’* BN ( | Sub-BN: 20.67 (2.10) | 100% | fMRI during Weather Prediction Task (WPT), a probabilistic learning paradigm. | Previous or current neurological or medical disease; learning disability; substance abuse; history of significantly low body weight (<85% of ideal body weight); past or current AN | No behavioural differences in performance |
| 6. Cyr et al. (2016) [ | BN ( | BN: 16.6 (1.5) | 100% | fMRI BOLD response during reward based spatial learning task (virtual learning) | History of neurological illness; past seizures; head trauma with loss of consciousness (LOC); mental retardation; pervasive developmental disorder; current Axis I disorder (other than depressive / anxiety disorder for clinical group) | BN vs HCs: engaged the right anterior hippocampus when receiving |
| 7. Lee et al. (2017) [ | BN ( | BN: 23.7 (2.2) | 100% | fMRI performed while participants completed the Stroop match-to-sample task, in which participant attention is controlled by an interaction between bottom-up sensory processing and top-down cognitive processing driven mainly by the prefrontal cortex. The task was modified to include food and non-food conditions. | BMI < 17.5; current or past psychiatric disorder; traumatic brain injury; neurological illness; current or past use of psychiatric medications | BN vs HC: lower accuracy indicating impaired cognitive control over interference. Higher activation in the premotor cortex and dorsal striatum in response to food images |
| 8. Marsh et al. (2009) [ | BN ( | BN: 25.7(7.0) | 100% | fMRI used to examine BOLD during performance on a Simon spatial incompatibility task (SSIT). Two groups compared on patterns of brain activation. | History of neurological illness; past seizures; head trauma with LOC; mental retardation, pervasive developmental delay | BN vs HC: responded significantly more impulsively and made a greater number of errors on the SSIT |
| 9. Marsh et al. (2011) [ | BN ( | BN: 18.4 (2.1) | 100% | fMRI used to examine BOLD during performance on a Simon spatial incompatibility task. Two groups compared on patterns of brain activation. | History of neurological illness; past seizures; head trauma with LOC; mental retardation, pervasive developmental delay | BN and HCs performed comparably however during correct responses in conflict trials the frontostriatal circuits failed to activate to the same degree in the BN group |
| 10. Marsh et al. (2015) [ | BN adolescent <19yo (n=16) | Not reported for either group; only that there were adolescents and adults in both BN & HCs. | 100% | fMRI completed to compare morphological characteristics of their cerebral surface | History of neurological illness; past seizures; head trauma with LOC; mental retardation, pervasive developmental delay | BN vs HCs: Significant reduction of local volumes on brain surface found in the frontal and temperoparietal areas (bilateral middle frontal and precentral gyri; right postcentral gyrus and lateral superior, and lateral superior and inferior frontal gyri of the left hemisphere). Reductions were also found in temperoparietal regions including bilateral inferior temporal gyri, right superior parietal gyrus and cuneus, bilateral posterior cingulate cortices, left precuneus and fusiform gyrus. |
| 11. Miyake, Okamoto, Onada, Kurosaki et al., (2010) [ | BN ( | BN: 24.5 (5.8) | 100% | fMRI with emotional decision task with distorted body images (varying degrees of ‘thinness and fatness’ of own and healthy female body photo) | Presence of Axis I or II disorder other than ED; left handedness | In AN-R, AN-BP and HCs, but not BN, the amygdala was significantly activated in response to own ‘fat-image’ |
| 12. Miyake, Okamoto, Onada, Shirao et al. (2010) [ | BN ( | BN: 25.0 (6.9) | 100% | fMRI while completing emotional word decision making task, examining processing of words (negative body image words e.g.obesity; and neutral words). | Presence of Axis I or II disorder other than ED; left handedness | Negative body image words condition:AN-R & AN-BP vs BN & HC: right amygdala significantly more activated |
| 13. Mohr et al. (2011) [ | BN ( | BN: 24.8 (3.2) | 100% | fMRI while rating satisfaction and size estimation of distorted own body photographs | History of substance abuse; schizophrenia and psychotic symptoms; bipolar disorder; neurological illness; closed head injury; left handedness | The activation pattern in the insula reflected satisfaction ratings of BN and HCs |
| 14. Pringle et al. (2011) [ | BN ( | BN: 24.55 (4.97) | 100% | fMRI to examine self-referent emotional processing, where patients had to endorse 60 personality characteristic words as ‘me’ or ‘not me’ in rapid event related design. | Left handedness; medication | BN vs HCs: rating of negative personality descriptors was associated with reduced activity in the parietal, occipital and limbic areas, including the amygdala |
| 15. Schienle et al. (2009) [ | BED ( | BED: 26.4 (6.4) | 100% | fMRI completed after 12-hr overnight fast, while participants viewed three categories of images: high calorie (e.g. ice cream, french fries), disgust- inducing (e.g. dirty toilets, maggots) and affectively neutral (e.g. household items). | Medication; clinically relevant depression; left handedness | All participants demonstrated increased activation in the OFC, ACC and insula highlighting a basic appetitive response pattern. No group differences in disgust-inducing images |
| 16. Seitz et al. (2016) [ | BN ( | BN: 18.71 (2.53) | 100% | fMRI while participants completed a modified version of the Attention Network Task (ANT), investigating neural networks associated with alerting, reorienting and executive attention. | History of psychosis; substance abuse; IQ <80 | BN vs. HCs: |
| 17. Skunde et al. (2016) [ | BN ( | BN: 27.54 (10.52) | 100% | fMRI while completing a general and food-specific (participants selected 8 of their favourite food images from a set of 85 high-calorie foods prior to completing the task) no-go task (the no-go task is a sub-task of the go-no-go task and measures behavioural inhibition). | Biploar disorder; psychosis; history of head injury; neurologic disorder; diabetes mellitus; nicotine / drug / alcohol abuse; lifetime diagnosis of BPD | BN vs. HCs: reduced activation in the right sensorimotor area (postcentral gyrus, precentral gyrus) and right dorsal striatum (caudate nucleus, putamen) |
| 18. Spangler et al. (2012) [ | BN ( | BN: Age range reported only (18-38) | 100% | fMRI while looking at computer- generated images of ‘thin’ (BMI= 18) or ‘fat’ (BMI=31) bodies (and control condition: scrambled image). Participants instructed | In BN: medication other than antidepressants | BN: no significant difference found in brain activation while looking at thin vs fat images |
| 19. Uher et al. 2004 [ | BN ( | BN: 29.80 (8.80) | 100% | fMRI completed while being presented with photographs of savoury and sweet foods; non-food items; emotionally aversive photographs and neutral stimuli. | Axis I disorders other than ED; neurological or psychiatric illness aside from ED; psychotropic medication other than antidepressants | BN vs HCs: greater occipital and cerebellar activity |
| 20. Uher et al. 2005 [ | BN ( | BN: 29.6 (9.3) | 100% | fMRI to examine cerebral correlates of body image activity when participants looking at line drawings of underweight (BMI = <17.5), normal weight (20<BMI<25), and overweight (BMI 27.5) female bodies vs. control images (line drawings of houses) | Psychosis; alcohol or drug dependence; neurological or psychiatric illness aside from ED; psychotropic medication other than antidepressants | No regions of significantly increased activations in either eating disorder group, compared to the control subjects |
| 21. Vocks et al. 2010 [ | AN ( | AN: 29.08 (9.79) | 100% | fMRI while participants looked at 16 standardised photographs of their own body and another woman’s body (BMI 19), taken while wearing a bikini. | Left handedness; personality disorder | AN & BN vs. HCs: while viewing photographs of their own body, eating disorder patients showed weakened activity in the left inferior parietal lobule |
Characteristics and key findings of included studies using SPECT and PET as the primary method.
| Authors & Journal | Participants | Mean Age (SD) | % Female | Procedure | Psychiatric / other exclusions | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Beato-Fernandez et al. (2011) [ | AN-R ( | AN-R: 27.1 | Not reported | 3x SPECT scans to measure rCBF during rest condition; calm visual stimulus condition and another after seeing their own body (filmed). | Left handedness; psychiatric illness aside from ED; neurological disorders | AN-R, AN-P, BN-P, BN-NP vs HCs: decreased right temporal rCBF when moving from rest condition to neutral visual image |
| 2. Karhunen et al. (2000) [ | OB BED ( | OB BED: 36.1(9.3) | 100% | 1 x SPECT scan to measure rCBF while participants were looking at a control image (landscape) and 1 x SPECT scan while participants were looking at a portion of real food after an overnight fast. | Left handedness; | OB BED vs OB non-BED & HCs: significantly greater increase in rCBF in the left hemisphere compared to the right hemisphere, particularly in the frontal and prefrontal cortices, in the food exposure condition |
| 3. Delvenne et al. (1997) [ | BN ( | BN: 26.2 (10.9) | 100% | Resting state PET with (18-F) fluorodeoxyglucose used to evaluate cerebral glucose metabolism. | History of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT); significant abnormalities on physical and neurological examination; left handedness; no psychoactive medication for a minimum of 10 days; history of neuroleptic medication | BN vs HCs: absolute hypometabolism of glucose both globally and regionally, notably in the parietal and superior frontal cortices. The BN group also showed a lower relative regional cerebral glucose metabolism in the parietal cortex |
| 4. Nozoe et al. (1995) [ | BN ( | BN: 21.0 (2.9) | 100% | Examined rCBF using SPECT before and after food intake (slice of cake) | Left handedness; abnormal neurological findings | BN vs AN & HCs: highest rCBF before eating in the left temporal and bilateral inferior frontal regions. Also, BN showed less increase in cortical activity post-eating |