4.7 Article

Eating After Acute Psychosocial Stress in Healthy Men and Women: Sex Differences and Endocrine Mechanisms

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ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgad578

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acute psychosocial stress; sex differences; cortisol; hunger; CCK

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This study investigated the endocrine mechanisms underlying eating behaviors after acute psychosocial stress and found potential sex differences. Lower immediate total cortisol stress reactivity was associated with higher hunger, particularly in women. Women ate less after stress and had consistently lower levels of hunger and cortisol compared to men. In addition, women's cholecystokinin (CCK) levels were not reactive to acute stress and eating, while men's CCK levels showed a reactive increase. These findings suggest a higher risk for stress-induced eating in women.
Context Overweight and obesity have become a major health burden with a higher prevalence of obesity in women than in men. Mental stress has been discussed to play a role in this context.Objective We investigated endocrine mechanisms underlying eating after acute psychosocial stress and potential sex differences therein.Methods A total of 32 male and 31 female healthy participants underwent the Trier Social Stress Test before they tasted ice cream in a bogus taste test 15 minutes after stress. We repeatedly assessed the stress hormone cortisol and the satiety hormone cholecystokinin (CCK) in saliva as well as perceived hunger before and up to 1 hour after stress.ResultsLower immediate total cortisol stress reactivity predicted higher hunger (Ps <= .004), but was not associated with food intake (Ps >= .90) or total CCK release (Ps >= .84). As compared to men, women ate less after stress (Ps < .001) and had consistently lower levels of hunger (Ps <= .024) and cortisol (Ps <= .008) as well as a lower immediate total cortisol stress reactivity (Ps = .002). Further, they differed in the kinetics of CCK over the total experimental procedure (Ps <= .011), in immediate reaction to stress (Ps <= .038), and after eating (Ps <= .072), with women's CCK levels continuously decreasing while men's CCK levels were reactive.Conclusion We found evidence for lower immediate total cortisol stress reactivity relating to higher perceived hunger, with lower cortisol levels in women. Unlike in men, CCK levels in women were not reactive to acute stress and eating and decreased continuously. Our results may suggest a higher risk for stress-induced eating in women.

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