Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California San Francisco (UCSF), United States; Center for Health and Community, Department of Psychiatry, UCSF, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, United States.
Physiol Behav. 2019 Jul 1;206:264-273. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2019.04.014. Epub 2019 Apr 17.
In general, glucose consumption improves cognitive performance; however, it is unknown whether glucose specifically alters attentional food bias, and how this process may vary by BMI status. We hypothesized that glucose consumption would increase attentional food bias among individuals of obese BMI status more so than among individuals of lean BMI status. Participants (N = 35) completed the n-back, a working memory task modified to assess attentional food bias (ATT-Food), under fasting and glucose challenge conditions. We computed pre-post changes in ATT-Food, blood glucose and insulin (∆BG & ∆BI), and perceived task-stress (∆stress). After the second cognitive test and blood draw, participants ate lunch and completed a "taste test" of highly palatable foods, and we recorded food consumption. Pre-post changes in ATT-Food were greater among participants of obese (relative to lean) BMI status (F(1,33) = 5.108, p = .031). Greater ∆ATT-Food was significantly associated with greater ∆BG (r = .462, p = .007) and reduced ∆stress (r =-.422, p = .011), and marginally associated with greater taste-test eating (r =.325, p = .057), but was not associated with ∆BI. Our findings suggest that individuals of obese BMI status may exhibit "sweet cognition," as indexed by greater attentional food bias following glucose ingestion, relative to individuals of lean BMI status. Among individuals of obese BMI status, sweet cognition may arise from difficulty broadening attention toward non-food cues after consuming a high glucose load, thereby potentially perpetuating sugar consumption. If confirmed by further research, measures of sweet cognition may help identify individuals with a phenotype of risk for obesity and greater sugar consumption, who may benefit from tailored interventions.
一般来说,葡萄糖的摄入可以改善认知表现;然而,目前尚不清楚葡萄糖是否能特异性地改变注意力偏向食物的倾向,以及这一过程可能会如何因 BMI 状况而变化。我们假设,葡萄糖的摄入会使肥胖 BMI 状态的个体比瘦 BMI 状态的个体更能增加注意力偏向食物的倾向。参与者(N=35)在禁食和葡萄糖挑战条件下完成了 n-back,这是一种经过修改以评估注意力偏向食物的工作记忆任务(ATT-Food)。我们计算了 ATT-Food、血糖和胰岛素(∆BG 和 ∆BI)以及感知到的任务压力(∆stress)的前后变化。在第二次认知测试和血液采集后,参与者吃了午餐并完成了对高可口食物的“味觉测试”,我们记录了食物的摄入量。在 ATT-Food 的前后变化中,肥胖(相对于瘦)BMI 状态的参与者变化更大(F(1,33) = 5.108,p = 0.031)。较大的 ∆ATT-Food 与较大的 ∆BG 显著相关(r = 0.462,p = 0.007)和较小的 ∆stress 相关(r = -0.422,p = 0.011),与味觉测试中吃的更多相关(r = 0.325,p = 0.057),但与 ∆BI 无关。我们的研究结果表明,与瘦 BMI 状态的个体相比,肥胖 BMI 状态的个体在摄入葡萄糖后可能会表现出“甜食认知”,这表现为注意力偏向食物的倾向更大。在肥胖 BMI 状态的个体中,甜食认知可能源于在高葡萄糖负荷后难以将注意力扩大到非食物线索上,从而可能会持续增加糖的摄入。如果进一步的研究证实了这一点,那么甜食认知的测量可能有助于识别出具有肥胖和更多糖摄入风险的表型的个体,这些个体可能会受益于量身定制的干预措施。