Berthoud Hans-Rudolf, Münzberg Heike, Morrison Christopher D
Neurobiology of Nutrition and Metabolism Department, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University System, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Neurobiology of Nutrition and Metabolism Department, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University System, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Gastroenterology. 2017 May;152(7):1728-1738. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2016.12.050. Epub 2017 Feb 10.
The brain plays a key role in the controls of energy intake and expenditure, and many genes associated with obesity are expressed in the central nervous system. Technological and conceptual advances in both basic and clinical neurosciences have expanded the traditional view of homeostatic regulation of body weight by mainly the hypothalamus to include hedonic controls of appetite by cortical and subcortical brain areas processing external sensory information, reward, cognition, and executive functions. Hedonic controls interact with homeostatic controls to regulate body weight in a flexible and adaptive manner that takes environmental conditions into account. This new conceptual framework has several important implications for the treatment of obesity. Because much of this interactive neural processing is outside awareness, cognitive restraint in a world of plenty is made difficult and prevention and treatment of obesity should be more rationally directed to the complex and often redundant mechanisms underlying this interaction.
大脑在能量摄入和消耗的控制中起着关键作用,许多与肥胖相关的基因在中枢神经系统中表达。基础神经科学和临床神经科学在技术和概念上的进展,已将传统观点中主要由下丘脑进行的体重稳态调节,扩展到包括由处理外部感觉信息、奖赏、认知和执行功能的皮质及皮质下脑区进行的食欲享乐控制。享乐控制与稳态控制相互作用,以一种灵活且能适应环境条件的方式调节体重。这一新的概念框架对肥胖治疗具有若干重要意义。由于这种交互式神经处理的大部分过程是在意识之外进行的,所以在物质丰富的环境中进行认知抑制变得困难,肥胖的预防和治疗应更合理地针对这种相互作用背后复杂且往往冗余的机制。