Behavioral Interventions to Attenuate Driven Overeating and Weight Regain After Bariatric Surgery.

Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)

Department of Psychiatry and Psychology and Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, Metabolism, and Nutrition, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States.

Published: August 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Weight regain after bariatric surgery often relates to challenges like problematic eating behaviors, which can be either recurring or newly developed, leading to feelings of loss of control over eating.
  • - The review aims to explore the connection between these eating issues and driven overeating, focusing on factors such as emotional responses, the pursuit of food rewards, and impulsivity, which contribute to weight regain post-surgery.
  • - It proposes treatment strategies that include behavioral weight maintenance techniques and concepts like self-compassion and physical activity to help manage increased hunger, cravings, and overeating tendencies after surgery.

Article Abstract

Weight regain after bariatric surgery is associated with problematic eating behaviors that have either recurred after a period of improvement or are new-onset behaviors. Problematic eating behaviors after bariatric surgery have been conceptualized in different ways in the literature, such as having a food addiction and experiencing a loss of control of eating. The intersection of these constructs appears to be defined as patients' experiences of reduced control of their eating which results in overeating behavior. The purpose of this review is to define patient experiences of driven overeating through the behavioral expression of emotion-based eating, reward-based eating, and executive functioning deficits-namely impulsivity-which is associated with weight regain after having bariatric surgery. Delineating concepts in this way and determining treatment strategies accordingly may reduce distress related to the inevitable return of increased hunger, cravings, portion sizes, and tolerance for highly palatable foods after surgery. Along with standard behavioral weight maintenance strategies, topics including acceptance, motivation, emotion-based eating, reward-based/impulsive eating, physical activity, and self-compassion are discussed. These concepts have been adapted for patients experiencing weight regain after having bariatric surgery and may be particularly helpful in attenuating driven overeating and weight regain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9339601PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.934680DOI Listing

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