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Food Reward Associations with Motivational Eating Behavior Traits and BMI in Portuguese Former Elite Athletes.

BACKGROUND: Motivational eating behavior traits (i.e., eating motivations and intuitive eating) have an important role in body weight regulation, as do food reward processes. Its associations might help explain different responses to food stimulus in the current environment but have never been explored. This study primary goal was to investigate food reward associations with eating motivations, intuitive eating dimensions, and BMI in former Portuguese elite athletes with overweight/obesity. As a first step, a cultural adaptation of the Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire (LFPQ) was created and validated in an online-surveyed Portuguese sample.

RESULTS: Step 1: Analysis from an online survey (N = 348; 69.8% female) conducted to validate the food images from the cultural adaptation of the LFPQ showed that most food images were properly recognized in terms of their fat and sweet content by the Portuguese population, except for some savory items. Step 2: Regarding our primary analysis in 94 former elite athletes with overweight/obesity, self-determined motivations to regulate eating and (to a lower extent) more body-food congruent choices (both markers for healthier eating behaviors) were associated with more favorable food reward outcomes, as opposed to non-self-determined motivations. Less emotional (more intuitive) eaters presented higher implicit wanting for low-fat sweet foods compared to more emotional eaters.

CONCLUSION: These findings suggest LFPQ usefulness to evaluate food preferences and detect relevant associations between food reward and motivational eating behavior traits in former elite athletes with overweight/obesity. Health professionals are encouraged to create need-supportive environments that foster self-determined motivations and help individuals make healthier food choices. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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