Tomoyasu N, Kenney N J
Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.
Am J Physiol. 1989 Nov;257(5 Pt 2):R1075-82. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.1989.257.5.R1075.
The role of palatability, novelty, and food aversion in determining changes of food choice after ablation of the area postrema and caudal-medial aspect of the nucleus of the solitary tract (AP/cmNTS) is examined through a series of studies utilizing 24-h, two-food choice tests. On test days, the food that the animal has ingested since the time of lesioning or sham surgery is presented along with a novel food that varies in palatability. The results indicate that postlesion diet history is the major determinant of food choice by lesioned rats. Lesioned rats consistently take less of their familiar postlesion food than diet-matched controls, suggesting that the lesioned rats have developed an aversion to that food. Over-ingestion of the novel food may occur, but this outcome is not reliable. No indication that the animals' response to food palatability is affected by AP/cmNTS ablation was found. Learned aversion to a food ingested after AP/cmNTS ablation may account not only for changes of food preference after the lesion but also may be involved in the hypophagia and weight loss resulting from the ablation.
通过一系列使用24小时双食物选择测试的研究,探讨了适口性、新奇性和食物厌恶在孤束核最后区和尾内侧部分(AP/cmNTS)切除后食物选择变化中的作用。在测试日,呈现动物自损伤或假手术以来摄入的食物以及一种适口性不同的新奇食物。结果表明,损伤后饮食史是损伤大鼠食物选择的主要决定因素。与饮食匹配的对照组相比,损伤大鼠摄入其熟悉的损伤后食物的量持续减少,这表明损伤大鼠对该食物产生了厌恶。可能会出现对新奇食物的过度摄入,但这一结果并不稳定。未发现有迹象表明动物对食物适口性的反应受AP/cmNTS切除的影响。AP/cmNTS切除后对摄入食物产生的习得性厌恶不仅可能导致损伤后食物偏好的变化,还可能与切除引起的摄食减少和体重减轻有关。