García-García I, Horstmann A, Jurado M A, Garolera M, Chaudhry S J, Margulies D S, Villringer A, Neumann J
Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychobiology, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour (IR3C), Barcelona, Spain; Department of Neurology, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
Obes Rev. 2014 Nov;15(11):853-69. doi: 10.1111/obr.12221. Epub 2014 Sep 29.
Similarities and differences between obesity and addiction are a prominent topic of ongoing research. We conducted an activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis on 87 studies in order to map the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) response to reward in participants with obesity, substance addiction and non-substance (or behavioural) addiction, and to identify commonalities and differences between them. Our study confirms the existence of alterations during reward processing in obesity, non-substance addiction and substance addiction. Specifically, participants with obesity or with addictions differed from controls in several brain regions including prefrontal areas, subcortical structures and sensory areas. Additionally, participants with obesity and substance addictions exhibited similar blood-oxygen-level-dependent fMRI hyperactivity in the amygdala and striatum when processing either general rewarding stimuli or the problematic stimuli (food and drug-related stimuli, respectively). We propose that these similarities may be associated with an enhanced focus on reward--especially with regard to food or drug-related stimuli--in obesity and substance addiction. Ultimately, this enhancement of reward processes may facilitate the presence of compulsive-like behaviour in some individuals or under some specific circumstances. We hope that increasing knowledge about the neurobehavioural correlates of obesity and addictions will lead to practical strategies that target the high prevalence of these central public health challenges.
肥胖与成瘾之间的异同是当前研究的一个突出课题。我们对87项研究进行了激活可能性估计元分析,以描绘肥胖、物质成瘾和非物质(或行为)成瘾参与者对奖励的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)反应,并确定它们之间的共性和差异。我们的研究证实了肥胖、非物质成瘾和物质成瘾在奖励处理过程中存在改变。具体而言,肥胖或成瘾参与者在包括前额叶区域、皮层下结构和感觉区域在内的几个脑区与对照组存在差异。此外,肥胖和物质成瘾参与者在处理一般奖励刺激或问题刺激(分别为食物和药物相关刺激)时,杏仁核和纹状体中表现出相似的血氧水平依赖性功能磁共振成像过度活跃。我们认为,这些相似性可能与肥胖和物质成瘾中对奖励的关注度增加有关,尤其是在食物或药物相关刺激方面。最终,奖励过程的这种增强可能会在某些个体或某些特定情况下促进强迫样行为的出现。我们希望,增加对肥胖和成瘾的神经行为相关性的了解,将产生针对这些核心公共卫生挑战高患病率的实用策略。