AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated cognitive function and laboratory parameters in adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa (AN) before and after nutritional rehabilitation, comparing them to healthy peers.
  • The results showed that girls with AN performed better in cognitive tasks than the healthy group during acute malnutrition, and their scores improved after nutritional recovery.
  • Despite no significant laboratory abnormalities or cognitive deficits being identified as biomarkers for early AN, the findings suggest that adolescents can maintain cognitive abilities even in severe malnutrition, indicating a robust compensatory capacity.

Article Abstract

Background: The present study aimed to evaluate cognitive function and laboratory parameters in adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa (AN) before and after nutritional rehabilitation (NR) compared to healthy female peers (CG).

Methods: We evaluated 36 girls with AN at two-time points, during acute malnutrition (AN1) and after NR, in a partially normalized weight status (AN2). We compared their cognitive functions and laboratory parameters to 48 healthy CG subjects. Cognitive function was assessed using a Cognitive Assessment Battery (CAB) assessment, depressive symptom levels were assessed using a Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) assessment, and eating disorders were assessed using an Eating Attitude Test (EAT-26).

Results: The AN1 group scored better in total cognition, attention, estimation, and spatial perception than the CG group ( < 0.05), with scores increasing in the AN2 group. Shifting and visual perception values did not differ between the study groups ( = 0.677, = 0.506, respectively). Laboratory tests showed no significant abnormalities and did not differ significantly between groups ( > 0.05). There was a negative correlation for EAT-26 and CAB in the AN1 group (rho = -0.43, = 0.01), but not for BDI.

Conclusions: Cognitive function in adolescent girls with AN was better than CG and correlated with EAT-26 score. These results highlight the high compensatory capacity of the adolescent body to maintain cognitive function despite severe malnutrition. Our results suggest that although normalization of body weight is crucial, other factors can significantly influence improvements in cognitive function. Cognitive deficits and laboratory tests may not be biomarkers of early forms of AN.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11510226PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu16203435DOI Listing

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