Departments of Radiology and the Diabetes and Obesity Center of Excellence, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2012 Nov;96(5):989-99. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.112.042341. Epub 2012 Sep 18.
Neuronal processes that underlie the subjective experience of satiety after a meal are not well defined.
We investigated how satiety alters the perception of and neural response to visual food cues.
Normal-weight participants (10 men, 13 women) underwent 2 fMRI scans while viewing images of high-calorie food that was previously rated as incompatible with weight loss and "fattening" and low-calorie, "nonfattening" food. After a fasting fMRI scan, participants ate a standardized breakfast and underwent reimaging at a randomly assigned time 15-300 min after breakfast to vary the degree of satiety. Measures of subjective appetite, food appeal, and ad libitum food intake (measured after the second fMRI scan) were correlated with activation by "fattening" (compared with "nonfattening") food cues in a priori regions of interest.
Greater hunger correlated with higher appeal ratings of "fattening" (r = 0.46, P = 0.03) but not "nonfattening" (r = -0.20, P = 0.37) foods. Fasting amygdalar activation was negatively associated with fullness (left: r = -0.52; right: r = -0.58; both P ≤ 0.01), whereas postbreakfast fullness was positively correlated with activation in the dorsal striatum (right: r = 0.44; left: r = 0.45; both P < 0.05). After breakfast, participants with greater activation in 4 regions-medial orbital frontal cortex (r = 0.49, P < 0.05), left amygdala (r = 0.49, P < 0.05), left insula (r = 0.47, P < 0.05), and nucleus accumbens (right: r = 0.57, P < 0.01; left: r = 0.43, P < 0.05)-chose buffet foods with higher fat content.
Postmeal satiety is shown in regional brain activation by images of high-calorie foods. Regions including the amygdala, nucleus accumbens, and dorsal striatum may alter perception of, and reduce motivation to consume, energy-rich foods, ultimately driving food choice. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01631045.
饱腹感是进食后的一种主观体验,但其背后的神经过程尚未明确。
本研究旨在探讨饱腹感如何改变对视觉食物线索的感知和神经反应。
正常体重的参与者(10 名男性,13 名女性)接受了 2 次 fMRI 扫描,扫描期间观看高热量食物(先前评定为与减肥和“增肥”相矛盾的食物)和低热量“非增肥”食物的图片。在禁食 fMRI 扫描后,参与者在随机指定的时间(早餐后 15-300 分钟)吃一顿标准化早餐,并进行再成像,以改变饱腹感程度。主观食欲、食物吸引力和自由进食量(在第二次 fMRI 扫描后测量)与“增肥”(与“非增肥”相比)食物线索在预先确定的感兴趣区域中的激活呈正相关。
更高的饥饿感与“增肥”食物的更高吸引力评分相关(r = 0.46,P = 0.03),但与“非增肥”食物无关(r = -0.20,P = 0.37)。空腹杏仁核激活与饱腹感呈负相关(左侧:r = -0.52;右侧:r = -0.58;均 P ≤ 0.01),而早餐后饱腹感与背侧纹状体的激活呈正相关(右侧:r = 0.44;左侧:r = 0.45;均 P < 0.05)。早餐后,4 个区域(内侧眶额皮质[r = 0.49,P < 0.05]、左侧杏仁核[r = 0.49,P < 0.05]、左侧岛叶[r = 0.47,P < 0.05]和伏隔核[r = 0.57,P < 0.01;左侧:r = 0.43,P < 0.05])的激活程度更高的参与者选择了脂肪含量更高的自助餐食物。
高卡路里食物的图像会引起饱腹感后的区域大脑激活。杏仁核、伏隔核和背侧纹状体等区域可能会改变对高热量食物的感知,并减少对其的消费动力,最终影响食物选择。该试验在 clinicaltrials.gov 上注册为 NCT01631045。