Sinha Rajita
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, School of Medicine, Yale Stress Center, 2 Church Street South, Suite 209, New Haven, CT 06519, United States; Department of Neuroscience, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, United States.
Biol Psychol. 2018 Jan;131:5-13. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2017.05.001. Epub 2017 May 4.
The US remains at the forefront of a global obesity epidemic with a significant negative impact on public health. While it is well known that a balance between energy intake and expenditure is homeostatically regulated to control weight, growing evidence points to multifactorial social, neurobehavioral and metabolic determinants of food intake that influence obesity risk. This review presents factors such as the ubiquitous presence of rewarding foods in the environment and increased salience of such foods that stimulate brain reward motivation and stress circuits to influence eating behaviors. These rewarding foods via conditioned and reinforcing effects stimulate not only metabolic, but also stress hormones, that, in turn, hijack the brain emotional (limbic) and motivational (striatal) pathways, to promote food craving and excessive food intake. Furthermore, the impact of high levels of stress and trauma and altered metabolic environment (e.g. higher weight, altered insulin sensitivity) on prefrontal cortical self-control processes that regulate emotional, motivational and visceral homeostatic mechanisms of food intake and obesity risk are also discussed. A heuristic framework is presented in which the interactive dynamic effects of neurobehavioral adaptations in metabolic, motivation and stress neurobiology may further support food craving, excessive food intake and weight gain in a complex feed-forward manner. Implications of such adaptations in brain addictive-motivational and stress pathways and their effects on excessive food intake and weight gain are discussed to highlight key questions that requires future research attention in order to better understand and address the growing obesity epidemic.
美国仍处于全球肥胖流行的前沿,对公众健康产生重大负面影响。虽然众所周知,能量摄入与消耗之间的平衡通过体内平衡调节来控制体重,但越来越多的证据表明,食物摄入存在多因素的社会、神经行为和代谢决定因素,这些因素会影响肥胖风险。本综述介绍了一些因素,比如环境中无处不在的诱人食物以及此类食物的显著性增加,这些会刺激大脑的奖赏动机和应激回路,从而影响进食行为。这些诱人食物通过条件作用和强化作用,不仅会刺激代谢激素,还会刺激应激激素,进而劫持大脑的情感(边缘系统)和动机(纹状体)通路,以促进食物渴望和过度进食。此外,还讨论了高水平应激和创伤以及改变的代谢环境(如体重增加、胰岛素敏感性改变)对前额叶皮层自我控制过程的影响,这些过程调节着食物摄入和肥胖风险的情感、动机和内脏稳态机制。本文提出了一个启发式框架,其中代谢、动机和应激神经生物学中神经行为适应的交互动态效应可能以复杂的前馈方式进一步支持食物渴望、过度进食和体重增加。文中讨论了大脑成瘾动机和应激通路中此类适应的影响及其对过度进食和体重增加的作用,以突出一些关键问题,这些问题需要未来的研究予以关注,以便更好地理解和应对日益严重的肥胖流行问题。