Triangulating causality between childhood obesity and neurobehavior: Behavioral genetic and longitudinal evidence

被引:4
|
作者
Kulisch, Leonard Konstantin [1 ,2 ]
Arumaee, Kadri [1 ]
Briley, Daniel A. [3 ]
Vainik, Uku [1 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tartu, Inst Psychol, Tartu, Estonia
[2] Univ Leipzig, Wilhem Wundt Inst Pschol, Leipzig, Germany
[3] Univ Illinois, Dept Psychol, Champaign, IL USA
[4] Univ Tartu, Inst Genom, Tartu, Estonia
[5] McGill Univ, Montreal Neurol Inst, Montreal, PQ, Canada
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
behavioral genetics; body mass index; causality; childhood obesity; longitudinal analysis; neurobehavior; BODY-MASS INDEX; PEDIATRIC OBESITY; WEIGHT STATUS; CHILDREN; REWARD; ASSOCIATION; FAT; ADOLESCENTS; IMPULSIVITY; OVERWEIGHT;
D O I
10.1111/desc.13392
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Childhood obesity is a serious health concern that is not yet fully understood. Previous research has linked obesity with neurobehavioral factors such as behavior, cognition, and brain morphology. The causal directions of these relationships remain mostly untested. We filled this gap by using the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study cohort comprising 11,875 children aged 9-10. First, correlations between the age- and sex-specific 95th BMI percentile (%BMIp95) and neurobehavioral measures were cross-sectionally analyzed. Effects were then aggregated by neurobehavioral domain for causal analyses. Behavioral genetic Direction of Causation modeling was used to test the direction of each relationship. Findings were validated by longitudinal cross-lagged panel modeling. %BMIp95 correlated with impulsivity, motivation, psychopathology, eating behavior, and cognitive tests (executive functioning, language, memory, perception, working memory). Greater %BMIp95 was also associated with reduced cortical thickness in frontal and temporal brain areas but with increased thickness in parietal and occipital areas. Similar although weaker patterns emerged for cortical surface area and volume. Behavioral genetic modeling suggested causal effects of %BMIp95 on eating behavior (beta = 0.26), cognition (beta = 0.05), cortical thickness (beta = 0.15), and cortical surface area (beta = 0.07). Personality/psychopathology (beta = 0.09) and eating behavior (beta = 0.16) appeared to influence %BMIp95. Longitudinal evidence broadly supported these findings. Results regarding cortical volume were inconsistent. Results supported causal effects of obesity on brain functioning and morphology. The present study highlights the importance of physical health for brain development and may inform interventions aimed at preventing or reducing pediatric obesity. Research HighlightsA continuous measure related to obesity, %BMIp95, has correlations with various measures of brain functioning and structureBehavioral genetic and longitudinal modeling suggest causal links from personality, psychopathology, and eating behavior to %BMIp95Results also indicate directional links from %BMIp95 to eating behavior, cognition, cortical thickness, and cortical surface areaObesity may play a role for healthy brain development during childhood
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页数:12
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