Effect of Satiation on Brain Activity in Obese and Lean Women
- 1 November 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Obesity Research
- Vol. 9 (11) , 676-684
- https://doi.org/10.1038/oby.2001.92
Abstract
To investigate the response of the brains of women to the ingestion of a meal. We used measures of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), a marker of neuronal activity, by positron emission tomography to describe the functional anatomy of satiation, i.e., the response to a liquid meal in the context of extreme hunger (36-hour fast) in 10 lean (BMI < or = 25 kg/m(2); 32 +/- 10 years old, 61 +/- 7 kg; mean +/- SD) and 12 obese (BMI > or = 35 kg/m(2); 30 +/- 7 years old, 110 +/- 14 kg) women. In lean and obese women, satiation produced significant increases in rCBF in the vicinity of the prefrontal cortex (p < 0.005). Satiation also produced significant decreases in rCBF in several regions including the thalamus, insular cortex, parahippocampal gyrus, temporal cortex, and cerebellum (in lean and obese women), and hypothalamus, cingulate, nucleus accumbens, and amygdala (in obese women only; all p < 0.005). Compared with lean women, obese women had significantly greater increases in rCBF in the ventral prefrontal cortex and had significantly greater decreases in the paralimbic areas and in areas of the frontal and temporal cortex. This study indicates that satiation elicits differential brain responses in obese and lean women. It also lends additional support to the hypothesis that the paralimbic areas participate in a central orexigenic network modulated by the prefrontal cortex through feedback loops.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Amygdala-lesion obesity: what is the role of the various amygdaloid nuclei?American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 2000
- Regional cerebral blood flow during exposure to food in obese binge eating womenPsychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, 2000
- The temporal response of the brain after eating revealed by functional MRINature, 2000
- Differential brain responses to satiation in obese and lean men.Diabetes, 2000
- Dopamine Receptor Subtype Agonists and Feeding BehaviorObesity Research, 1995
- Rapid Automated Algorithm for Aligning and Reslicing PET ImagesJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1992
- Comparing Functional (PET) Images: The Assessment of Significant ChangeJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1991
- The ventromedial hypothalamic syndrome, satiety, and a cephalic phase hypothesis.Psychological Review, 1977
- The problem of the frontal lobe: A reinterpretationJournal of Psychiatric Research, 1971