Heidi Splete
January 19, 2023
Eating in response to stress — known as emotional eating — was significantly associated with several markers of long-term cardiovascular damage, based on data from 1,109 individuals.
“We know diet plays a huge role in cardiovascular disease, but we have focused a lot of work on what you eat, not on what makes you eat” — the current study did exactly that, Martha Gulati, MD, who wasn’t involved in the study, said in an interview.
“Emotional eaters consume food to satisfy their brains rather than their stomachs,” study investigator Nicolas Girerd, MD, of the National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM) and a cardiologist at the University Hospital of Nancy (France), wrote in a press release accompanying the study.
Diet plays a role in the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD), but the impact of eating behavior on long-term cardiovascular health remains unclear, wrote Dr. Girerd and colleagues. Previous research has yielded three common psychological dimensions for eating behavior: emotional eating, restrained eating, and external eating.
Both emotional eating and restrained eating have been linked to cardiovascular disease risk, the researchers noted. “Because of previous findings, we hypothesized that [emotional and/or restrained dimensions of eating behavior] are positively associated with cardiovascular damages, as well as with CV risk factors, such as metabolic syndrome,” they wrote.