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UnknownNCT02708979

Stress and Eating Behavior Among University Students - an Randomized Controlled Trial

StrEat - Stress and Eating Behavior

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Copenhagen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The high worldwide prevalence of overweight and obesity as well as metabolic and disease consequences, are well-documented. The positive energy balance underlying obesity is attributable to excess energy intake and/or insufficient energy expenditure. However, it seems that the increase in mean body weight can be sufficiently explained by increases in mean energy intake. It has been proposed that this overeating is partly caused by increased availability of highly processed energy dense, high reward foods. Psychosocial stress and sleep insufficiency is pervasive in industrialized societies. A growing body of evidence suggests stress to be involved in obesity, although it is unknown whether stress is a cause or consequence. Stress affecting dietary intake; skewing intake towards greater consumption of highly palatable energy dense foods, also referred to as high reward foods. A causal relationship between stress and reward seeking behavior is supported by findings from animal studies reporting rewarding behavior by consumption of sweet tasting food in response to a stressor. Our aim is to investigate differences in purchases of particular food-items in free living individuals, during a stressful (upcoming exam) and non-stressful (no upcoming exam) period. Hypothesis: Participants will purchase more high reward foods during the pre-exam period, compared to the control non-exam period.

Detailed description

STUDY METHODS Study design: The study is a randomized controlled two-armed cross-over intervention study. The study is carried out in 50 healthy university students, both genders. In random order the participants will be investigated during stressful-period (prior to an exam) and a non-stressful (control period) period. Each participant will take part in all together four visits, two in the stressful period and two visits in the non-stressful period. The study will take place, at the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports (NEXS), Faculty of Science at the University of Copenhagen, Rolighedsvej 26, 1958 Frederiksberg C. Recruitment will take place at the University of Copenhagen STATISTICAL ANALYSES Analysis of the primary outcome (food choices) will be based on an ANCOVA-type linear mixed model with the intervention and allocation order as the fixed effect and person as the random effect. Analysis will be performed using the software R, SAS, STATA or SPSS. Analyses, data processing and writing of the article are expected to extend over the study period and a year beyond.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERUniversity exam-periodThis visit takes place one week prior to an exam at the university assuming that students will be stressed in this period.
OTHERUniversity non-exam-periodThis visit takes place several weeks post and prior to an exam at the university assuming that students will not be stressed in this period.

Timeline

Start date
2016-02-01
Primary completion
2016-08-01
Completion
2016-08-01
First posted
2016-03-15
Last updated
2016-03-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02708979. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.