Obesities, Vol. 6, Pages 1: The Interplay Between Insulin Resistance, Affective Dysregulation, and Binge Eating in Obesity: Toward an Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment Model
Obesities doi: 10.3390/obesities6010001
Authors:
Luna Carpinelli
Carolina Amato
Daniela Abate Marinelli
Giovanna Stornaiuolo
Giulia Savarese
Background: Obesity is increasingly recognized as a complex condition characterized by the convergence of metabolic dysregulation and psychological vulnerability. Insulin resistance (IR) has been identified as a biological bridge linking metabolic imbalance with affective symptoms such as anxiety, depression, and disordered eating behaviors. Methods: Fifteen obese adults (mean age = 25 ± 4.3 years) were evaluated through clinical examination, anthropometric assessment (BMI), biochemical assays (fasting insulin, AST, ALT), and standardized psychological assessments (STAI, BDI-II). In parallel, a rapid systematic review (2019–2025) synthesized evidence on the association between IR, affective dysregulation, binge eating disorder (BED), and the clinical role of insulin-sensitizing or incretin-based therapies. Results: Participants exhibited marked hyperinsulinemia (M = 79 μU/mL, SD = 6.61) and elevated anxiety (STAI-Trait = 54.22 ± 22.4) and depression scores (BDI-II = 21.6 ± 7.5). Liver enzymes were within normal limits. Literature synthesis confirmed consistent associations between IR, mood symptoms, and BED, associated with biological processes including inflammation, HPA axis hyperactivity, and dopaminergic imbalance. Integrated treatment approaches combining cognitive-behavioral therapy, medical nutrition therapy, and insulin-sensitizing agents (metformin, GLP-1RA, and GLP-1/GIP RA) were supported as effective and safe options. Conclusions: The coexistence of insulin resistance and emotional dysregulation in obesity is consistent with the hypothesis of a bidirectional metabolic–emotional axis. Early, integrated interventions addressing both metabolic and psychological domains may improve clinical outcomes and reduce progression toward chronic metabolic and psychiatric comorbidity.
Source link
Luna Carpinelli www.mdpi.com
