Brains Of Obese Light Up For High-Calorie Foods

French Fries

First Posted: 09/19/11 01:28 PM ET Updated: 11/19/11 05:12 AM ET

The brains of people who are obese may be wired differently for impulse control, such as resisting a doughnut when their blood sugar levels drop, compared with people who are not obese, a new study suggests.


Researchers wanted to look at brain regions that regulate behaviour and impulsiveness, especially when sugar levels in the blood drop below normal, such as after fasting overnight.


To find out, Dr. Kathleen Page, an assistant professor of clinical medicine at the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine in Los Angeles, and her colleagues used functional MRI to study nine non-obese and five obese subjects. Another seven people acted as controls to test the normal blood sugar conditions.


The participants watched pictures of high-fat or high-calorie food, low-calorie foods or non-food pictures such as utensils while the blood flow in their brain was recorded. Their insulin and glucose levels were tightly controlled during the experiment using IV infusions.


The high-calorie food pictures included:


  • Hamburgers

  • French fries

  • Cookies

  • Ice cream

  • Chocolate

  • Pizza

Low-calorie foods pictured included:
  • Salads

  • Broccoli

  • Bean sprouts

  • Tofu

  • Fruits

"We saw a clear difference between the obese and the non-obese groups," said study co-author Rajita Sinha, chief of the psychology section in the psychiatry department at Yale University in New Haven, Conn.


Have Regular Meals


When blood sugar levels were normal, there was an increase in prefrontal control activation, a region of the brain involved in decision making, regulating impulses and resisting desires. It is the region of the brain that tells us to stop eating when blood sugar levels are normal, Page said.


In contrast, when blood sugar levels were low or hypoglycemic, there was increased desire for high-calorie foods, the researchers found.


"For the obese group, this was more dramatic," Sinha said.


People who are obese may be particularly vulnerable, given that we live in an environment inundated with food images, she noted.


The researchers advise people who are obese to have small, regular meals that are healthy to keep their sugar levels up, and to see their doctor for a full checkup of glucose and insulin levels.


They don't know if obesity itself may be causing the effect or if the brains of obese and lean people are wired differently, Page said.


The study's authors acknowledged the study included few subjects, which is typical for fMRI studies. The normal-weight participants had an average age of 31 and the obese subjects had an average age of 30.


The research, which appeared in Monday's issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation and the Yale Stress Center.


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The brains of people who are obese may be wired differently for impulse control, such as resisting a doughnut when their blood sugar levels drop, compared with people who are not obese, a ...
The brains of people who are obese may be wired differently for impulse control, such as resisting a doughnut when their blood sugar levels drop, compared with people who are not obese, a ...
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12:18 AM on 09/21/2011
Which came first - the stimulus or the response? Are the brains of obese people trained at an early age to light up in the presence of salt/fat, like a survival mechanism? And how few subjects were tested? I'm wary of studies that test ~3-5 people which then make gross generalizations about the larger population.
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NotEve
Facts are of no use against the irrational
09:13 PM on 09/20/2011
This is an interesting study, but not a new one. The results have been reported before.

In fact, studies have already demonstrated very interesting correlations between the pleasure centers of obese individuals and those with substance addictions [1]. Certainly those who are morbidly obese demonstrate many behaviors that are consistent with substance addiction [2].

Personally, I think that there is much to gain from utlizing traditional substance abuse methods to treat morbid obesity. Keep in mind that we are specifically discussing a particular population - the morbidly obese. I haven't seen much evidence to suggest that the majority of people who are overweight suffer from an addictive psychosis versus simply poor lifestyle choices, but perhaps they might benefit from similar treatment protocols. That would be an interesting study.

[1] Volkow ND, Wang GJ, Fowler JS, Telang F. Overlapping neuronal circuits in addiction
and obesity: evidence of systems pathology. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B
Biol Sci. 2008;363(1507):3191-3200.
[2] Volkow ND, O’Brien CP. Issues for DSM-V: should obesity be included as a brain
disorder? Am J Psychiatry. 2007;164(5):708-710.
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Steven Tramz
05:45 PM on 09/20/2011
Take the pressure people use to influence smokers, and apply that to people who eat because they can. When you have a dinner, don't serve desert. Ever. When you have a snack served, make it fruit or vegetables. You don't need salt on your food. You don't need sugar in your coffee. Ketchup, Mayonnaise, salad dressings,bye bye. Stop treating your tongue like the boss.Take sweets and fats out of your diet, and eat one or two meals per day. No more than 1800 calories. You won't die, but you will need to buy smaller pants.
09:35 PM on 09/20/2011
You had me until "eat one or two meals per day."

Frequent small meals make a lot more sense for those trying to lose weight or maintain the loss...but perhaps this worked for you. Did you have to lose a lot?
03:06 PM on 09/20/2011
As someone who has gone from morbidly obese to a healthy weight, I would be interested to know the results for people who used to be obese. Controlling my eating continues to be a daily thing but it is easier than it used to be.
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LanceLee
08:29 PM on 09/20/2011
I was in the same boat as you, almost exactly. I lost about 35lbs, and every day was still a struggle. Since then I've figured out how to do it. I stopped getting my carbs from grains, and started getting them from legumes and vegetables.

Basically I cut back my grain intake by 50% or more, and added a ton of beans/lentils, even peanuts. That was it, now I can eat regular small amounts of dessert and it is self regulating, I don't gain weight, I don't binge.
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Semprini
Stamp out and abolish redundancy
08:41 PM on 09/20/2011
It can become a habit, if you stick with it. Almost unconsciously you will limit your eating, if you keep to healthy foods, and don't starve yourself.

Believe it or not, food will lose that magic power...I wouldn't have thought it possible, but it's true.