Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia

Aim. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of insomnia on eating behavior, anxiety, depression, metabolic and hormonal parameters in obese patients. Materials and Methods. The study involved 104 patients with primary obesity from 20 to 55 years old: 47 men and 57 women, mean age 39...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Endocrinology Research Centre 2014-06-01
Series:Ожирение и метаболизм
Subjects:
Online Access:https://endojournals.ru/index.php/omet/article/view/6719
id doaj-871dddaebaac4271ab517b92038cb6e5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-871dddaebaac4271ab517b92038cb6e52021-10-02T15:59:17ZengEndocrinology Research CentreОжирение и метаболизм2071-87132306-55242014-06-01112242910.14341/omet2014224-296507Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomniaAim. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of insomnia on eating behavior, anxiety, depression, metabolic and hormonal parameters in obese patients. Materials and Methods. The study involved 104 patients with primary obesity from 20 to 55 years old: 47 men and 57 women, mean age 39 years, mean body weight 118 kg, BMI 39.6. Patients were divided into 2 groups: the first group consisted of patients with complaints of insomnia (n=45), the second (control) group (n=59) were patients without sleep disorders. Results. Mean levels of anxiety and depression were significantly higher in the first group. The results of research showed a statistically significant association emotional eating and insomnia. Patients with chronic insomnia without obstructive sleep apnea had low levels of free cortisol in 24-hour urinary compared with patients without sleep disorders (169 [145, 194] vs. 324 [244, 330], respectively, p=0.001), positive correlation with total sleep time, sleep efficiency, and negative with wake time during sleep period time. Conclusions. Sleep disorders in obese patients are one of the factors contributing to the increase in food intake in response to changes in emotional state on the background of "hidden" anxiety and depressive disorders. It is possible that the data eating disorders and psychological status may have a negative impact on the dynamics of weight during the treatment of obesity.https://endojournals.ru/index.php/omet/article/view/6719weightobesityeating behaviorsleepinsomniaanxietydepression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
title Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia
spellingShingle Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia
Ожирение и метаболизм
weight
obesity
eating behavior
sleep
insomnia
anxiety
depression
title_short Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia
title_full Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia
title_fullStr Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia
title_full_unstemmed Features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia
title_sort features of eating behavior, emotional state and metabolic parameters in obese patients with insomnia
publisher Endocrinology Research Centre
series Ожирение и метаболизм
issn 2071-8713
2306-5524
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Aim. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of insomnia on eating behavior, anxiety, depression, metabolic and hormonal parameters in obese patients. Materials and Methods. The study involved 104 patients with primary obesity from 20 to 55 years old: 47 men and 57 women, mean age 39 years, mean body weight 118 kg, BMI 39.6. Patients were divided into 2 groups: the first group consisted of patients with complaints of insomnia (n=45), the second (control) group (n=59) were patients without sleep disorders. Results. Mean levels of anxiety and depression were significantly higher in the first group. The results of research showed a statistically significant association emotional eating and insomnia. Patients with chronic insomnia without obstructive sleep apnea had low levels of free cortisol in 24-hour urinary compared with patients without sleep disorders (169 [145, 194] vs. 324 [244, 330], respectively, p=0.001), positive correlation with total sleep time, sleep efficiency, and negative with wake time during sleep period time. Conclusions. Sleep disorders in obese patients are one of the factors contributing to the increase in food intake in response to changes in emotional state on the background of "hidden" anxiety and depressive disorders. It is possible that the data eating disorders and psychological status may have a negative impact on the dynamics of weight during the treatment of obesity.
topic weight
obesity
eating behavior
sleep
insomnia
anxiety
depression
url https://endojournals.ru/index.php/omet/article/view/6719
_version_ 1716852812552339456