February 1st, 2012
New research from Uppsala University shows
that a specific brain region linked to appetite regulation is reduced in
elderly people who are obese. Poor eating habits over a lifetime may therefore
weaken brain function that helps us to control our desire to eat. The findings
are published in The International Journal of Obesity.
Researchers Samantha Brooks and Helgi Schiöth, of the
Department ofNeuroscience at Uppsala University, and researchers
in London, showed in an earlier article published in BMC Psychiatry that
excessive regulation of appetite in those with anorexia nervosa is linked to
greater brain volume in the same region. This research also showed that in
anorexic females, the more they restrained their eating, the larger this brain
region was.
In a new study, Samantha Brooks, together with colleagues
from Uppsala University (Christian Benedict, Helgi Schiöth, Elna-Marie Larsson,
Håkan Ahlström and Lars Lind) and researchers from other European universities,
have now looked at which brain regions, involved in regulation of appetite, are
altered in those with long term obesity. By means of magnetic imaging (MRI) the
researchers studied the brains of 292 elderly males and females who were
classified as consistently obese or normal weight over a five year period
before and after the brain scan. In those suffering from obesity a reduction in
the frontal part of the brain was found. The researchers further examined the
effects of being obese on a brain function linked to self-regulation of food
intake, and found cognitive deficits in those who where obese compared to those
who were normal weight.
Samantha Brooks explains:
“Those elderly people who were consistently obese over a
five year period showed reduced frontal brain volume and deficits in a brain
function that helps us to control our food intake. Obesity is on the increase
in our modern societies, and while our research cannot determine whether
obesity causes or is a consequence of reduced brain volume, in light of our
previous research it suggests that if you don’t use your brain to think about
what you eat, you may not only lose your waist line, but brain volume as well.”
By Linda Koffmar – Uppsala University
Contacts: Samantha Brooks, researcher at the Department of Neuroscience
Cecilia Yates – information officer at the Department of Neuroscience
Source: Uppsala University press release
Original Research: Research paper for “Late life obesity is associated with smaller global and regional gray matter volumes: a voxel-based morphometric study” by Brooks S et al. in the International Journal of Obesity
Contacts: Samantha Brooks, researcher at the Department of Neuroscience
Cecilia Yates – information officer at the Department of Neuroscience
Source: Uppsala University press release
Original Research: Research paper for “Late life obesity is associated with smaller global and regional gray matter volumes: a voxel-based morphometric study” by Brooks S et al. in the International Journal of Obesity
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