Title of article :
Reduction of anxiety after restricted feeding in the rat: implication for eating disorders
Author/Authors :
Koki Inoue، نويسنده , , Eric P. Zorrilla، نويسنده , , Antoine Tabarin، نويسنده , , Glenn R. Valdez، نويسنده , , Sinichi Iwasaki، نويسنده , , Nobuo Kiriike، نويسنده , , George F. Koob، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
7
From page :
1075
To page :
1081
Abstract :
Background Eating-disorder patients exhibit not only abnormal eating attitudes but also pathologic anxiety-like behaviors. The specific nature of the relationship between dieting and anxiety-like behavior is unknown. Methods To investigate the adaptational changes that resulted from chronic restricted scheduled feeding (2-hour access per day for 2 weeks) and subsequent free refeeding, longitudinal changes in the microstructure of feeding behavior were studied in male rats. To study the relationship between restricted feeding and anxiety-like behavior, separate rats were tested in the elevated plus-maze under the following conditions: 1) free feeding; 2) acute food restriction (2-hour access for 1 day); 3) chronic food restriction (for 10 days); or 4) postrecovery (after 10 days of free feeding subsequent to chronic food restriction). Results The effects of chronic food restriction on meal structure diminished within a few days after refeeding. Decreased anxiety-like behavior was seen during acute and chronic food restriction and did not reflect nonspecific behavioral activation. Anxiolytic-like effects persisted after 10 days of refeeding. Conclusions Chronic food restriction produced reductions in anxiety-like behavior that persisted beyond the normalization of food intake patterns. The findings might have etiologic and pathophysiologic relevance for the restrained eating pattern in eating-disorder patients with comorbid anxious symptoms.
Keywords :
Locomotor activity , eating disorders , Anxiety-like behavior , Restricted feeding , meal structure
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Record number :
502353
Link To Document :
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