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This study investigates excessive avoidance behaviors in patients with a diagnosis of Anorexia Nervosa (AN) compared to a healthy control group. The study further examines the role of reward (relief) as a putative factor in maintaining excessive avoidance behaviors in AN.
Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a life-threatening mental disease with a disappointing treatment outcome. Fear of weight gain and diet restrictions are considered the core symptoms of AN. Although from a diagnostic perspective AN is conceptualized as an eating-related disorder connected to an extremely low Body Mass Index (BMI) and body image distortion, AN might represent a specific phenotype of anxiety disorders characterized by tenacious avoidance behaviors, especially the restrictive subtype. To date, avoidance in AN is often investigated as a general personality trait (e.g. harm avoidance) but poorly examined in its behavioral form (which is life-threatening, such as food-avoidance). Hence, the investigators will perform a systematic investigation of excessive avoidance behaviors within a laboratory setting. Within a learning perspective, the investigators will investigate excessive avoidance in a group of 30 AN patients and 30 healthy volunteers. To achieve this, a well-validated avoidance paradigm will be used. Most critically, the investigators will examine whether patients with a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa show persistent avoidance behaviors compared to a control group. Additionally, the investigators will examine if, in the anorexia group, higher subjective relief to successful omissions of negative events during avoidance learning predicts persistent (excessive) avoidance behaviors after fear extinction.
Age
18 - 40 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Psychiatry | UZ Leuven campus Gasthuisberg
Leuven, Belgium
University of KU Leuven, Faculteit Psychologie en Pedagogische Wetenschappen
Leuven, Belgium
Start Date
May 1, 2019
Primary Completion Date
May 1, 2021
Completion Date
September 1, 2021
Last Updated
May 28, 2020
100
ESTIMATED participants
Behavioral avoidance task
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
Bram Vervliet
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT07435818