Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies.

Eating disorders (ED) can arise from a combination of biological and psychological factors. Some studies suggest that intellectual factors might be important in the development of ED, although the evidence is still scarce. The aim of this study was to examine the association between cognition measurements (cognitive performance and academic achievement) and the risk of developing ED in adolescents considering their weight status. The sample consisted of 3,307 adolescents (1,756 girls), aged 13-18.5 years, who participated in the AVENA (n¿=¿1,430; 783 girls) and AFINOS (n¿=¿1,877; 973 girls) studies. Cognitive performance was measured by the TEA test in the AVENA study, and academic achievement was self-reported in the AFINOS study. ED risk was evaluated in both studies by using the SCOFF questionnaire. Body mass index was calculated to classify adolescents as non-overweight or overweight (including obesity). Overweight adolescents showed a higher risk of developing ED than non-overweight ones in both studies. In the AVENA study, overweight boys with low performance in reasoning ability showed increased risk of ED (p¿=¿0.05). In the AFINOS study, overweight boys with low academic performance in physical education and non-overweight girls with low academic achievement in all the areas analyzed showed higher risk of ED than their peers (all p¿<¿0.05). CONCLUSION: No association between cognitive performance and ED risk was found in adolescents, while academic achievement was associated with ED risk, especially in non-overweight girls. The non-cognitive traits that accompany academic achievement could influence the likelihood of developing ED in these girls.

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Main Authors: Veses, Ana M., Gómez Martínez, Sonia, Heredia, F. Pérez de, Esteban-Cornejo, Irene, Castillo-Gualda, Ruth, Estecha Querol, Sara, García-Fuentes, Miguel, Veiga, Óscar, Calle, M. Elisa, Marcos, Ascensión
Format: artículo biblioteca
Published: Springer 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/122490
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spelling dig-ictan-es-10261-1224902018-12-03T13:31:44Z Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies. Veses, Ana M. Gómez Martínez, Sonia Heredia, F. Pérez de Esteban-Cornejo, Irene Castillo-Gualda, Ruth Estecha Querol, Sara García-Fuentes, Miguel Veiga, Óscar Calle, M. Elisa Marcos, Ascensión Eating disorders (ED) can arise from a combination of biological and psychological factors. Some studies suggest that intellectual factors might be important in the development of ED, although the evidence is still scarce. The aim of this study was to examine the association between cognition measurements (cognitive performance and academic achievement) and the risk of developing ED in adolescents considering their weight status. The sample consisted of 3,307 adolescents (1,756 girls), aged 13-18.5 years, who participated in the AVENA (n¿=¿1,430; 783 girls) and AFINOS (n¿=¿1,877; 973 girls) studies. Cognitive performance was measured by the TEA test in the AVENA study, and academic achievement was self-reported in the AFINOS study. ED risk was evaluated in both studies by using the SCOFF questionnaire. Body mass index was calculated to classify adolescents as non-overweight or overweight (including obesity). Overweight adolescents showed a higher risk of developing ED than non-overweight ones in both studies. In the AVENA study, overweight boys with low performance in reasoning ability showed increased risk of ED (p¿=¿0.05). In the AFINOS study, overweight boys with low academic performance in physical education and non-overweight girls with low academic achievement in all the areas analyzed showed higher risk of ED than their peers (all p¿<¿0.05). CONCLUSION: No association between cognitive performance and ED risk was found in adolescents, while academic achievement was associated with ED risk, especially in non-overweight girls. The non-cognitive traits that accompany academic achievement could influence the likelihood of developing ED in these girls. The AVENA Study was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Health, FIS (00/0015) and grants from Panrico S.A., Madaus S.A. and Procter & Gamble S.A. The AFINOS Study was supported by grant DEP2006-56184-C03-01-02-03/PREV from the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science and cofunded by FEDER funds from European Union. Peer Reviewed 2015-09-23T06:15:15Z 2015-09-23T06:15:15Z 2015 2015-09-23T06:15:15Z artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 doi: 10.1007/s00431-014-2386-3 issn: 0340-6199 European Journal of Pediatrics 174: 229- 236 (2015) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/122490 10.1007/s00431-014-2386-3 Sí none Springer
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region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del ICTAN España
description Eating disorders (ED) can arise from a combination of biological and psychological factors. Some studies suggest that intellectual factors might be important in the development of ED, although the evidence is still scarce. The aim of this study was to examine the association between cognition measurements (cognitive performance and academic achievement) and the risk of developing ED in adolescents considering their weight status. The sample consisted of 3,307 adolescents (1,756 girls), aged 13-18.5 years, who participated in the AVENA (n¿=¿1,430; 783 girls) and AFINOS (n¿=¿1,877; 973 girls) studies. Cognitive performance was measured by the TEA test in the AVENA study, and academic achievement was self-reported in the AFINOS study. ED risk was evaluated in both studies by using the SCOFF questionnaire. Body mass index was calculated to classify adolescents as non-overweight or overweight (including obesity). Overweight adolescents showed a higher risk of developing ED than non-overweight ones in both studies. In the AVENA study, overweight boys with low performance in reasoning ability showed increased risk of ED (p¿=¿0.05). In the AFINOS study, overweight boys with low academic performance in physical education and non-overweight girls with low academic achievement in all the areas analyzed showed higher risk of ED than their peers (all p¿<¿0.05). CONCLUSION: No association between cognitive performance and ED risk was found in adolescents, while academic achievement was associated with ED risk, especially in non-overweight girls. The non-cognitive traits that accompany academic achievement could influence the likelihood of developing ED in these girls.
format artículo
author Veses, Ana M.
Gómez Martínez, Sonia
Heredia, F. Pérez de
Esteban-Cornejo, Irene
Castillo-Gualda, Ruth
Estecha Querol, Sara
García-Fuentes, Miguel
Veiga, Óscar
Calle, M. Elisa
Marcos, Ascensión
spellingShingle Veses, Ana M.
Gómez Martínez, Sonia
Heredia, F. Pérez de
Esteban-Cornejo, Irene
Castillo-Gualda, Ruth
Estecha Querol, Sara
García-Fuentes, Miguel
Veiga, Óscar
Calle, M. Elisa
Marcos, Ascensión
Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies.
author_facet Veses, Ana M.
Gómez Martínez, Sonia
Heredia, F. Pérez de
Esteban-Cornejo, Irene
Castillo-Gualda, Ruth
Estecha Querol, Sara
García-Fuentes, Miguel
Veiga, Óscar
Calle, M. Elisa
Marcos, Ascensión
author_sort Veses, Ana M.
title Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies.
title_short Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies.
title_full Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies.
title_fullStr Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies.
title_full_unstemmed Cognition and the risk of eating disorders in Spanish adolescents: the AVENA and AFINOS studies.
title_sort cognition and the risk of eating disorders in spanish adolescents: the avena and afinos studies.
publisher Springer
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/122490
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