4.7 Article

Trait anxiety is associated with amygdala expectation and caloric taste receipt response across eating disorders

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 2, Pages 380-390

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41386-022-01440-z

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This study examined the relationship between anxious traits and neurobiology in individuals with eating disorders (EDs). The results showed that amygdala sucrose expectation response was elevated in anorexia nervosa and this relationship was negatively moderated by trait anxiety across EDs. The findings suggest that trait anxiety may play an important role in driving taste stimulus receipt brain response and food approach in individuals with EDs.
Anxious traits are elevated in eating disorders (EDs), are considered risk factors for ED development, and trait anxiety has been linked to ED psychopathology. How trait anxiety relates to ED neurobiology is not well understood. In this study 197 individuals across the ED spectrum (anorexia nervosa n = 91; other specified EDs n = 34; bulimia nervosa n = 56; binge ED n = 16), and 120 healthy controls were assessed for anxious traits and learned to expect and receive caloric or neutral taste stimuli during brain imaging. Amygdala sucrose expectation response differed across groups (Wilk's lambda = 0.945, p = 0.023), and was higher on the left in anorexia nervosa compared to healthy controls (p = 0.002). Expected sucrose receipt response across taste reward regions was not different between groups. In the ED sample, trait anxiety negatively moderated the relationship between amygdala expectation and right dorsal (p = 0.0062) and ventral (p = 0.0046) anterior insula receipt response. A subgroup analysis showed similar results for anorexia nervosa, and partially in bulimia nervosa. Across EDs, appetitive motivation correlated positively with bilateral orbitofrontal cortex, caudate head, and ventral striatal sucrose receipt response (r = 0.215 to 0.179, p = 0.002 to 0.012). Across the study sample, trait anxiety showed an inverted-U-shaped relationship with right (r = 0.147, p = 0.034) and left (r = 0.162, p = 0.016) amygdala expectation response. Amygdala sucrose expectation response is elevated in anorexia nervosa, correlates with sucrose receipt response, and this relationship is negatively moderated by trait anxiety across EDs. Trait anxiety may have an important role in how expectation drives taste stimulus receipt brain response and perhaps food approach in individuals with EDs.

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