Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

The costs of over-control in anorexia nervosa: evidence from fMRI and ecological momentary assessment

Sophie Pauligk, Maria Seidel, Sophia Fürtjes, Joseph A. King, Daniel Geisler, Inger Hellerhoff, Veit Roessner, Ulrike Schmidt, Thomas Goschke, Henrik Walter, Alexander Strobel, Stefan Ehrlich

Translational Psychiatry · 2021

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Summary

A growing body of evidence suggests that a high level of self-control may, despite its positive effects, influence cognitive processing in an unfavorable manner. However, the affective costs of self-control have only rarely been investigated. Anorexia nervosa (AN) is an eating disorder that is often characterized by excessive self-control. Here, we used fMRI to explore whether over-control in AN may have negative affective consequences. 36 predominantly adolescent female AN patients and 36 age-matched healthy controls (HC) viewed negative and neutral pictures during two separate fMRI sessions before and after 10 min of rest. We tested whether abnormally elevated neural activity during the initial presentation in a brain region broadly implicated in top-down control, the dorsolateral prefro

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41398-021-01405-8
Catalogue ID
SNmoj7nsmc-0o1qv4
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