This site is intended for healthcare professionals
Journals
  • Home
  • /
  • Journals
  • /
  • Anxiety disorders
  • /
  • Executive function in eating disorders: The role o...
Journal

Executive function in eating disorders: The role of state anxiety

Read time: 1 mins
Published:25th Mar 2020

Objective: We examined the influence of depression and anxiety on executive function in individuals with a DSM-IV diagnosis of anorexia nervosa-restricting type, anorexia nervosa-binge-eating/purging type, bulimia nervosa, or eating disorder not otherwise specified.

Method: We assessed 106 women after their inpatient treatment in an eating disorders program. All participants were nutritionally stable at the time of testing.

Results: Thirty percent of the total sample showed impaired performance on one or more tests of executive function. No differences in executive function were observed among diagnostic groups. Anxiety scores accounted for significant variance in performance for all groups.

Discussion: Executive function deficits were found in a minority of our sample, with significant variance in performance accounted for by self-reported anxiety. State anxiety appears to contribute to diminished executive function in women with eating disorders.

 

Read abstract on library site