Heart Rate Variability and Laboratory-Based Loss-of-Control Eating in Children and Adolescents

Author:

Parker Megan N.ORCID,Faulkner Loie M.,Shank Lisa M.ORCID,Schvey Natasha A.,Loch Lucy K.,Haynes Hannah E.ORCID,Bloomer Bess F.,Moursi Nasreen A.ORCID,Fatima Syeda,Te-Vazquez Jennifer A.,Brady Sheila M.,Yang Shanna B.,Turner Sara A.,Tanofsky-Kraff MarianORCID,Yanovski Jack A.ORCID

Abstract

Among youth, greater heart rate (HR) and lesser HR variability (HRV) are precursors to loss-of-control (LOC) eating episodes in the natural environment. However, there are limited data examining whether pre-meal HR and HRV are associated with greater LOC-eating in the laboratory setting. We therefore examined temporal relationships between pre-meal HR, frequency- and time-based metrics of pre-meal HRV, perceived LOC-eating, and energy intake during a meal designed to simulate a LOC-eating episode. Among 209 participants (54.5% female, 12.58 ± 2.72 years, 0.52 ± 1.02 BMIz), 19 reported LOC-eating in the prior month. Perceived LOC-eating during the laboratory meal was not significantly linked to pre-meal HR (p = 0.37), but was positively related to pre-meal HRV (ps = 0.02–0.04). This finding was driven by youth with recent LOC-eating, as these associations were not significant when analyses were run only among participants without recent reported LOC-eating (p = 0.15–0.99). Pre-meal HR and HRV were not significantly related to total energy intake (ps = 0.27–0.81). Additional research is required to determine whether early-stage pediatric LOC-eating is preceded by a healthy pre-meal stress response. Longitudinal studies could help clarify whether this pattern becomes less functional over time among youth who develop recurrent LOC-eating episodes.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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