PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

The complexity of the interaction between binge-eating and attention.

  • Roni Halevy-Yosef,
  • Eytan Bachar,
  • Lilach Shalev,
  • Yehuda Pollak,
  • Adi Enoch-Levy,
  • Eitan Gur,
  • Abraham Weizman,
  • Daniel Stein,
  • Daniel Stein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215506
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. e0215506

Abstract

Read online

ObjectiveTo investigate whether binge-eating in patients with eating disorders (EDs) is associated with attentional deficits.MethodsWe studied ED patients with binge-eating (n = 51), no binge-eating (n = 59) and controls (n = 58). ED patients were assessed following the stabilization of weight and ED pathology. Attention assessment included evaluation of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) diagnosis, the Adult ADHD Self-Report (ASRS) and ADHD Rating Scale-IV-Home Version (ADHD-RS) questionnaires, and attention functioning assessed with neuropsychological tools. The severity of eating-related pathology, depression, anxiety and obsessionality was also monitored.ResultsPatients with binge-eating showed more ADHD symptomatology on the ADHD-RS compared with non-binge-eating patients. No differences were found between binge-eating and non-binge-eating patients in ADHD diagnosis and neuropsychological functioning. Among the specific ED subtypes, patients with anorexia nervosa binge/purge type (AN-B/P) showed the highest rates of ADHD symptomatology on the ADHD-RS, and were characterized with sustained attention deficits.ConclusionBinge-eating is not associated with attention deficits as measured by objective neuropsychological tools. Nonetheless, it is associated with attentional difficulties as measured with the self-reported ADHD-RS. AN-B/P patients are the only ED category showing objective sustained attention deficits.