Obesity effects on depression: systematic review of epidemiological studies

被引:265
作者
Atlantis, E. [1 ]
Baker, M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Fac Hlth Sci, Exercise Hlth & Performance Fac, Res Grp, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
关键词
BMI; depression; psychological distress; mental health; etiology;
D O I
10.1038/ijo.2008.54
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 [临床医学]; 100201 [内科学];
摘要
Background: Obesity is a well-known cause of cardiovascular disease burden and premature death, but effects on psychological morbidity remain uncertain. This article reports findings following a systematic review of epidemiological studies to determine whether obesity causes depression. Methods: Multiple databases were searched for English-language studies of etiology of obesity ( exposure variable, analyzed as an ordered category) on depression outcomes ( dependent variables, continuous or categorical). Studies in children and in women during pregnancy or postpartum were excluded, as were nonrepresentative cross-sectional studies. Searches and identification of studies for inclusion were performed by EA, whereas a descriptive synthesis of important study characteristics was undertaken independently by us. Results: We reviewed 24 out of approximately 4500 potentially relevant studies; 4 were prospective cohort studies and 20 were cross-sectional studies ( 10 from the United States). Effect measures reported in all prospective cohort studies were consistent and suggested that obesity may increase the odds of future depression outcomes (symptoms or nonclinical diagnosis of depression). Effect measures reported in most cross-sectional studies from the United States supported the hypothesized association between obesity and prevalence of depression outcomes for women but not men, in contrast most cross-sectional studies from populations other than the United States consistently failed to find such associations. Conclusions: Overall, there is a weak level of evidence supporting the hypothesis that obesity increases the incidence of depression outcomes. Few high-quality prospective cohort studies exist, and cross-sectional studies account for the vast body of published evidence, and therefore firm conclusions for causality cannot yet be drawn. Our finding warrants additional high-quality etiological research on this topic.
引用
收藏
页码:881 / 891
页数:11
相关论文
共 73 条
[1]
Depression and anxiety symptoms in relation to anthropometry and metabolism in men [J].
Ahlberg, AC ;
Ljung, T ;
Rosmond, R ;
McEwen, B ;
Holm, G ;
Åkesson, HO ;
Björntorp, P .
PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH, 2002, 112 (02) :101-110
[2]
ATLANTIS E, 2007, INT J OBES LOND, P1
[3]
*AUSTR BUR STAT, 4326 0 MENT HLTH WEL
[4]
Depression and pain comorbidity - A literature review [J].
Bair, MJ ;
Robinson, RL ;
Katon, W ;
Kroenke, K .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2003, 163 (20) :2433-2445
[5]
Approaching the shared biology of obesity and depression: the stress axis as the locus of gene-environment interactions [J].
Bornstein, S. R. ;
Schuppenies, A. ;
Wong, M. -L. ;
Licinio, J. .
MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY, 2006, 11 (10) :892-902
[6]
Binge eating, body image, depression, and self-efficacy in an obese clinical population [J].
Cargill, BR ;
Clark, MM ;
Pera, V ;
Niaura, RS ;
Abrams, DB .
OBESITY RESEARCH, 1999, 7 (04) :379-386
[7]
Relationships between obesity and DSM-IV major depressive disorder, suicide ideation, and suicide attempts:: Results from a general population study [J].
Carpenter, KM ;
Hasin, DS ;
Allison, DB ;
Faith, MS .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2000, 90 (02) :251-257
[8]
Chapman D. P., 2005, Preventing Chronic Disease, V2, pA14
[9]
JOLLY FAT REVISITED [J].
CRISP, AH ;
QUEENAN, M ;
SITTAMPALN, Y ;
HARRIS, G .
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH, 1980, 24 (05) :233-241
[10]
JOLLY FAT - RELATION BETWEEN OBESITY AND PSYCHONEUROSIS IN GENERAL POPULATION [J].
CRISP, AH ;
MCGUINESS, B .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1976, 1 (6000) :7-9