4.0 Article

Effects of a multicomponent behavioral intervention on impulsivity and cognitive deficits in adolescents with excess weight

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 5-6, Pages 609-615

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/FBP.0b013e328356c3ac

Keywords

adolescence; body mass index; human; inhibitory control; multicomponent intervention; negative urgency; obesity

Funding

  1. Andalusian Service of Health from the Ministry of Innovation and Science-Ministerio de Innovacion y Ciencia (MICINN) [PI 0416/2008, PSI2010-17290]

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The aim of this study was to explore the effects of a multidisciplinary behavioral intervention including cognitive behavioral therapy, structured physical activity, and dietary counseling on impulsive personality and cognitive skills and subsequent BMI loss in excess weight adolescents. Forty-two adolescents with excess weight (14 males and 28 females, range 12-17 years), as defined by the International Obesity Task Force Criteria, participated in our study. We used a longitudinal observational design with two assessments: before and after treatment. We collected baseline measures of impulsive personality (UPPS-P scale), cognitive performance (letter number sequencing, Stroop and Iowa gambling task), and biometric parameters. After 12 weeks of intervention, parallel measures were used to determine whether treatment-induced changes in impulsivity and cognition predicted changes in BMI. BMI showed a statistically significant reduction after treatment [from mean (SD) 29.36 (4.51) to 27.31 (4.41), Cohen's d = 0.5]. Greater reductions in negative urgency (negative-emotion-driven impulsivity) and greater improvement in cognitive inhibitory control skills were associated with greater reductions in BMI. Because the design was correlational and lacked a control group, future studies should clarify whether these associations reflect a causal effect or just overlapping improvements associated with a third variable (e.g. increases in attention procurement or motivation). Behavioural Pharmacology 23:609-615 (c) 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health vertical bar Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

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