Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’

There is mounting evidence that many highly processed foods have addictive properties, and that some cases of compulsive overeating are behavioral addictions. While support for the Yale Food Addiction Scale (YFAS) as a valid diagnostic tool has been impressive and continues to increase, to date, no...

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Main Authors: Caroline eDavis, Robert D. Levitan, Allan S. Kaplan, James L. Kennedy, Jacqueline C. Carter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00403/full
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author Caroline eDavis
Robert D. Levitan
Allan S. Kaplan
James L. Kennedy
Jacqueline C. Carter
author_facet Caroline eDavis
Robert D. Levitan
Allan S. Kaplan
James L. Kennedy
Jacqueline C. Carter
author_sort Caroline eDavis
collection DOAJ
description There is mounting evidence that many highly processed foods have addictive properties, and that some cases of compulsive overeating are behavioral addictions. While support for the Yale Food Addiction Scale (YFAS) as a valid diagnostic tool has been impressive and continues to increase, to date, no research has examined the food-addiction construct in response to an actual food stimulus, and in relation to direct measures of appetite and food consumption. As part of a larger community-based study of overeating in healthy adults who were predominately overweight and obese (aged 25-50 years), 136 participants completed the YFAS, of whom 23 met the diagnostic criteria for food addiction. They took part in a 2-day, double-blind, cross-over, single-dose drug challenge using a psychomotor stimulant (methylphenidate) and placebo. Participants were first assessed on ratings of appetite and food cravings after holding and tasting their favorite snack food, after which they were able to eat all or part of the snack, as they wished. Three separate repeated-measures Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) procedures were carried out, each with 2 between-subjects factors (Diagnosis: food addiction vs non-food addiction) and (Sex: male vs female) and 1 within-subjects factor (Days: drug vs placebo). As anticipated, for all three dependent variables, there was a significant main effect for Days with a response decrease from placebo to the drug condition. With respect to food cravings and appetite ratings, results indicated that the food-addiction group had significantly higher scores on both variables (p<0.0001). For food consumption, there was a significant Days x Diagnosis interaction (p=0.018) whereby the food-addiction group showed no food-intake suppression across days compared to the non-food-addiction group who demonstrated a significant decrease in snack-food consumption with methylphenidate. The finding that the food-addiction group was resistant to the food-intake suppression typic
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spelling doaj.art-314bf63c89c64030a9ee86dbbbd768dc2022-12-21T22:05:21ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-05-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0040391874Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’Caroline eDavis0Robert D. Levitan1Allan S. Kaplan2James L. Kennedy3Jacqueline C. Carter4York UniverstiyCentre for Addiction and Mental HealthCentre for Addiction and Mental HealthCentre for Addiction and Mental HealthMemorial University of NewfoundlandThere is mounting evidence that many highly processed foods have addictive properties, and that some cases of compulsive overeating are behavioral addictions. While support for the Yale Food Addiction Scale (YFAS) as a valid diagnostic tool has been impressive and continues to increase, to date, no research has examined the food-addiction construct in response to an actual food stimulus, and in relation to direct measures of appetite and food consumption. As part of a larger community-based study of overeating in healthy adults who were predominately overweight and obese (aged 25-50 years), 136 participants completed the YFAS, of whom 23 met the diagnostic criteria for food addiction. They took part in a 2-day, double-blind, cross-over, single-dose drug challenge using a psychomotor stimulant (methylphenidate) and placebo. Participants were first assessed on ratings of appetite and food cravings after holding and tasting their favorite snack food, after which they were able to eat all or part of the snack, as they wished. Three separate repeated-measures Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) procedures were carried out, each with 2 between-subjects factors (Diagnosis: food addiction vs non-food addiction) and (Sex: male vs female) and 1 within-subjects factor (Days: drug vs placebo). As anticipated, for all three dependent variables, there was a significant main effect for Days with a response decrease from placebo to the drug condition. With respect to food cravings and appetite ratings, results indicated that the food-addiction group had significantly higher scores on both variables (p<0.0001). For food consumption, there was a significant Days x Diagnosis interaction (p=0.018) whereby the food-addiction group showed no food-intake suppression across days compared to the non-food-addiction group who demonstrated a significant decrease in snack-food consumption with methylphenidate. The finding that the food-addiction group was resistant to the food-intake suppression typichttp://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00403/fullAppetitefood addictionFood Cravingsfood consumptionstimulant drugs
spellingShingle Caroline eDavis
Robert D. Levitan
Allan S. Kaplan
James L. Kennedy
Jacqueline C. Carter
Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’
Frontiers in Psychology
Appetite
food addiction
Food Cravings
food consumption
stimulant drugs
title Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’
title_full Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’
title_fullStr Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’
title_full_unstemmed Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’
title_short Food Cravings, Appetite, and Snack-Food Consumption in Response to a Psychomotor Stimulant Drug: The Moderating Effect of ‘Food Addiction’
title_sort food cravings appetite and snack food consumption in response to a psychomotor stimulant drug the moderating effect of food addiction
topic Appetite
food addiction
Food Cravings
food consumption
stimulant drugs
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00403/full
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