Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences Drexel University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA
2. Center for Weight Eating and Lifestyle Sciences Drexel University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA
3. Department of Psychology Ohio University Athens Ohio USA
4. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Temple University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveIndividuals with bulimia nervosa (BN) engage in both maladaptive (i.e., compulsive and/or compensatory) and adaptive exercise (e.g., for enjoyment). No research has examined whether those who engage in adaptive, compulsive, and/or compensatory exercise exhibit differences in BN pathology or treatment outcome compared to those not engaging in exercise, limiting intervention efficacy.MethodWe examined associations of baseline exercise engagement with baseline and posttreatment BN pathology among 106 treatment‐seeking adults (Mage = 37.4, SDage = 12.95, 87.74% female, 68.87% White) enrolled across four clinical trials of outpatient enhanced cognitive behavioral therapy for BN (range: 12–16 sessions). Analysis of covariances examined associations between baseline exercise type and baseline/posttreatment global eating pathology, dietary restraint, loss‐of‐control (LOC) eating, and purging frequency.ResultsThose engaging in only adaptive exercise reported lower global eating pathology compared to those engaging in compulsive‐only exercise (Est = −1.493, p = .014, Mdiff = −.97) while those engaging in baseline compulsive exercise reported less LOC eating compared to those not engaging in exercise (Est = −22.42, p = .012, Mdiff = −12.50). Baseline engagement in compulsive‐only exercise was associated with lower posttreatment global eating pathology compared to baseline engagement in no exercise (Est = −.856, p = .023, Mdiff = −.64) and both compulsive and compensatory exercise (Est = .895, p = .026, Mdiff = −1.08).DiscussionThose engaging in compulsive, compensatory, adaptive, and no exercise exhibit different patterns and severity of BN pathology. Future research is needed to position treatments to intervene on maladaptive, while still promoting adaptive, exercise.Public significance statementNo research to date has examined whether those who engage in adaptive, compulsive, and/or compensatory exercise exhibit differences in BN pathology or treatment outcome compared to those not engaging in exercise, limiting targeted intervention efforts. We found that those engaging in compulsive, compensatory, and adaptive exercise exhibit different patterns of BN pathology and that adaptive exercise engagement was related to lower cognitive eating disorder symptoms at baseline.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
1 articles.
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