Frontostriatal circuits and the development of bulimia nervosa

LA Berner, R Marsh - Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 2014 - frontiersin.org
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 2014frontiersin.org
Bulimia nervosa (BN) is characterized by both recurrent episodes of binge eating that are, in
part, defined by a sense of loss of control and compensatory behaviors to avoid weight gain.
Impulsive behaviors are also common in individuals with BN, indicating more pervasive
difficulties in behavioral self-regulation. Findings from functional and anatomical
neuroimaging studies of individuals with BN suggest dysfunction in the dorsal frontostriatal
circuits that support self-regulatory capacities and habit learning and in overlapping ventral …
Bulimia nervosa (BN) is characterized by both recurrent episodes of binge eating that are, in part, defined by a sense of loss of control and compensatory behaviors to avoid weight gain. Impulsive behaviors are also common in individuals with BN, indicating more pervasive difficulties in behavioral self-regulation. Findings from functional and anatomical neuroimaging studies of individuals with BN suggest dysfunction in the dorsal frontostriatal circuits that support self-regulatory capacities and habit learning and in overlapping ventral circuits that support reward processing and reward-based learning. In this review, we describe the normal development of frontostriatal circuits and then present behavioral and neuroimaging data from adolescents and adults with BN. These data suggest that the abnormal maturation of frontostriatal circuits may contribute to the habitual binge-eating and purging behaviors of BN. Future longitudinal imaging studies will improve understanding of how these circuits contribute to the developmental trajectory of BN and will inform novel interventions that could target or prevent the impulsive and habit-like features of this disorder.
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