Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04117542

Working Memory in Overweight Children With and Without Loss of Control Eating

Neural Substrates of Context-dependent Working Memory in Youth With Overweight/Obesity and Loss of Control Eating

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
30 (actual)
Sponsor
The Miriam Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
10 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

Loss of control (LOC) eating in children is associated with multiple physical and mental health impairments, including obesity and eating disorders. Little is known about the developmental neurobiology of LOC, which is crucial to specifying its pathophysiology and the development of effective preventive interventions. Individual differences in working memory (WM) appear to be related to LOC eating and excess weight status in youth, but the specificity and neural correlates of these individual differences are unclear. Failure to adequately understand the nature of associations between WM and eating behavior in children with overweight/obesity limits the development of appropriately-targeted, neuro-developmentally informed interventions addressing problematic eating and related weight gain in youth. To close this clinical research gap, the current study proposes to investigate the context-dependence of WM impairment and its neural correlates in children with concomitant overweight/ obesity and LOC eating as compared to their overweight/obese peers. Specific aims are to investigate: 1)WM performance in youth with LOC eating relative to overweight/obese controls during recalls in the context of food-related versus neutral distractors; and 2) neural activation patterns during WM performance across both food-related and neutral stimuli. We hypothesize that, relative to their overweight/obese peers, youth with LOC eating will show 1) more errors and slower response times during recalls involving food-related vs. neutral distractors, and fewer errors and faster response times during recalls involving food-related vs. neutral targets; 2) increased activation in prefrontal regions during WM performance across stimuli types relative to overweight/obese controls, and 3) even greater activation in the context of food-related versus neutral distractors. The proposed study is the first to use state-of-the-science neuroimaging methodology to clarify the relations between WM and LOC eating, with strong potential to advance understanding of the associations among executive functioning, excess weight status, and eating pathology, and inform the development of interventions (e.g., WM training) to alleviate their cumulative personal and societal burden.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERObservationalObservational data will be obtained through participant self-response, parental response, cognitive performance, and neural imaging.

Timeline

Start date
2018-10-18
Primary completion
2020-12-31
Completion
2020-12-31
First posted
2019-10-07
Last updated
2021-02-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04117542. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.