Cognitive dietary restraint is associated with higher urinary cortisol excretion in healthy premenopausal women

Author affiliations (2)
  • Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre ROR
  • University of British Columbia ROR

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 73(1), 7-12, 2000

DOI 10.1093/ajcn/73.1.7 PMID 11124742

Abstract

Background

Cognitive dietary restraint, assessed by the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire restraint subscale, is associated with subclinical menstrual cycle disturbances. This association may be mediated by stress-activated cortisol release.

Objective

We assessed whether 24-h urinary cortisol excretion differs between women with high and low restraint scores.

Design

Participants (aged 21.6+/-2.5 y; n = 62) with normal-length menstrual cycles and high (n = 33) or low (n = 29) restraint scores completed a questionnaire describing weight history, dietary practices, and exercise. Cortisol, calcium, and creatinine were measured in urine collected over 24 h on a day when all food and beverages were provided and measured. Previously, 3-d food records and anthropometric measurements were obtained.

Results

Age, height, weight, body mass index, and length of menstrual cycle were similar between groups. The reported amount of exercise was higher (3.4+/-1.7 compared with 2.2+/-1.8 h/wk; P<0.05) and energy intakes (assessed from 3-d and 24-h food records) were lower in the highthan in the low-restraint group. Ratios of urinary cortisol (nmol) to creatinine (mmol) were higher in the high-restraint than in the low-restraint group (42.9+/-12.9 compared with 36.3+/-8.9; P<0.05), whereas ratios of urinary calcium (mmol) to creatinine were lower (0.3+/-0.1 compared with 0.4+/-0.2; P<0.05) in the high-restraint group. Urinary cortisol was not associated with exercise, nutrient intakes, or anthropometric measurements.

Conclusions

High dietary restraint scores are associated with urinary cortisol, a biological marker of stress, and high cortisol excretion may affect bone health. Our results suggest that further research is warranted to clarify these associations and to determine whether they persist over time.

Topics

cognitive dietary restraint urinary cortisol premenopausal women, Prior JC dietary restraint menstrual cycle disturbance cortisol, Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire cortisol stress premenopausal, caloric restriction subclinical ovulatory disturbance cortisol mechanism, dietary restraint bone health calcium excretion cortisol, stress cortisol menstrual cycle anovulation eating behavior, urinary cortisol creatinine ratio dietary restriction women, McLean Barr Prior dietary restraint cortisol excretion, energy restriction exercise stress cortisol premenopausal women, eating behavior hypothalamic stress response reproductive function
PMID 11124742 11124742 DOI 10.1093/ajcn/73.1.7 10.1093/ajcn/73.1.7

Cite this article

McLean, J. A., Barr, S. I., & Prior, J. C. (2001). Cognitive dietary restraint is associated with higher urinary cortisol excretion in healthy premenopausal women. *The American journal of clinical nutrition*, *73*(1), 7-12. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/73.1.7

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