Dietary Restraint Moderates the Relationship between Postprandial Distress Syndrome and Binge Eating in Adolescents
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Objective
The current study investigated whether dietary restraint moderates the relationship between Postprandial Distress Syndrome (PDS) symptoms (e.g., postprandial fullness, early satiety, and nausea) and Binge Eating (BE) in adolescents with overweight and obesity. BE is associated with PDS symptoms. Individuals often self-initiate restrictive diets that limit food variety in attempt to manage PDS symptoms. However, dietary restraint is thought to increase frequency of BE. Thus, individuals who attempt to manage PDS symptoms through dietary restraint may engage in more BE. Investigating the relationship between dietary restraint and PDS in relation to BE will increase our understanding of risk factors for BE during adolescence—a period associated with heightened onset of disordered eating and dieting attempts.
Method
Adolescents ( N =60) with higher weight ( M Body Mass Index (BMI) percentile = 97.72 [ SD = 2.61], M age = 15.37 years [SD = 1.34], 63.3% female) completed measures of PDS symptoms, dietary restraint, and BE. Generalized linear regression examined whether dietary restraint moderated the relationship between PDS symptoms and BE frequency.
Results
The interaction effect was significant, such that greater PDS symptoms were associated with increased BE frequency when dietary restraint was average or higher than average.
Discussion
Results suggest that the relationship between PDS and BE symptoms depends on level of dietary restraint. Future work should investigate if this relationship holds for other GI syndromes and investigate the differential impact of dietary restraint versus restriction on PDS and BE.