Perceived parental bonding and cortisol awakening response in people with eating disorders
N. Attianese, M. Battipaglia, S. Donato, R. Ceres, R. Cerra, G. Cascino, P. Monteleone, A. M. Monteleone

TL;DR
This study explores how perceived parental care and control in childhood relate to stress hormone responses in adults with eating disorders.
Contribution
The study reveals a novel link between maternal care and cortisol awakening response in eating disorder patients.
Findings
Perceived maternal care is associated with the time pattern of cortisol awakening response in eating disorder patients.
Paternal care and control do not significantly influence cortisol awakening response in this population.
Maternal control and paternal factors show no association with cortisol levels in the study.
Abstract
Early life experiences may have an impact on hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis functioning in eating disorders (EDs). Parental bonding is defined as the parental contribution of care and control to parent–child relationships. We evaluated whether perceived care and protection of parental bonding in childhood and adolescence were associated with HPA axis functioning in adult patients with EDs. The activity of the HPA axis was assessed by measuring the salivary cortisol awakening response (CAR). We evaluated whether parental care and control in childhood and adolescence were associated with HPA axis functioning in adults with EDs. On the basis of literature data on healthy participants, we hypothesized that people with high levels of parental care would show a reduced CAR compared to people with low levels of parental care. We admitted patients according to the following…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEating Disorders and Behaviors · Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies
