Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
Department of Radiology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2022 May;46(5):1044-1050. doi: 10.1038/s41366-022-01065-8. Epub 2022 Feb 8.
Individuals typically show a childhood nadir in adiposity termed the adiposity rebound (AR). The AR serves as an early predictor of obesity risk, with early rebounders often at increased risk; however, it is unclear why this phenomenon occurs, which could impede understandings of weight gain trajectories. The brain's energy requirements account for a lifetime peak of 66% of the body's resting metabolic expenditure during childhood, around the age of the AR, and relates inversely to weight gain, pointing to a potential energy trade-off between brain development and adiposity. However, no study has compared developmental trajectories of brain metabolism and adiposity in the same individuals, which would allow a preliminary test of a brain-AR link.
We used cubic splines and generalized additive models to compare age trajectories of previously collected MRI-based 4D flow measures of total cerebral blood flow (TCBF), a proxy for cerebral energy use, to the body mass index (BMI) in a cross-sectional sample of 82 healthy individuals (0-60 years). We restricted our AR analysis to pre-pubertal individuals (0-12 years, n = 42), predicting that peak TCBF would occur slightly after the BMI nadir, consistent with evidence that lowest BMI typically precedes the nadir in adiposity.
TCBF and the BMI showed inverse trajectories throughout childhood, while the estimated age at peak TCBF (5.6 years) was close but slightly later than the estimated age of the BMI nadir (4.9 years).
The timing of peak TCBF in this sample points to a likely concordance between peak brain energetics and the nadir in adiposity. Inverse age trajectories between TCBF and BMI support the hypothesis that brain metabolism is a potentially important influence on early life adiposity. These findings also suggest that experiences influencing the pattern of childhood brain energy use could be important predictors of body composition trajectories.
个体通常在肥胖方面表现出一个称为肥胖反弹(AR)的儿童期低谷。AR 是肥胖风险的早期预测指标,早期反弹者通常风险增加;然而,尚不清楚为什么会发生这种现象,这可能会阻碍对体重增加轨迹的理解。大脑的能量需求在儿童时期,即 AR 左右的年龄,占身体休息代谢消耗的终生峰值的 66%,与体重增加呈反比,这表明大脑发育和肥胖之间存在潜在的能量权衡。然而,尚无研究在同一人群中比较大脑代谢和肥胖的发育轨迹,这将初步测试大脑-AR 之间的联系。
我们使用三次样条和广义加性模型,比较了之前在 82 名健康个体(0-60 岁)的横断面样本中收集的基于 MRI 的全脑血流(TCBF)的 4D 流测量的年龄轨迹,这是大脑能量利用的替代指标,与体重指数(BMI)进行比较。我们将 AR 分析仅限于青春期前的个体(0-12 岁,n=42),预测 TCBF 峰值将略迟于 BMI 低谷出现,这与最低 BMI 通常先于肥胖低谷的证据一致。
TCBF 和 BMI 在整个儿童期呈相反的轨迹,而 TCBF 峰值的估计年龄(5.6 岁)接近但略迟于 BMI 低谷的估计年龄(4.9 岁)。
在这个样本中,TCBF 峰值的时间表明大脑能量峰值与肥胖低谷之间可能存在一致性。TCBF 和 BMI 之间的负向年龄轨迹支持大脑代谢可能对生命早期肥胖有重要影响的假说。这些发现还表明,影响儿童期大脑能量利用模式的经验可能是身体成分轨迹的重要预测指标。