Higher resting-state activity in reward-related brain circuits in obese versus normal-weight females independent of food intake

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Abstract

Background: In response to food cues, obese vs normal-weight individuals show greater activation in brain regions involved in the regulation of food intake under both fasted and sated conditions. Putative effects of obesity on task-independent low-frequency blood-oxygenation-level-dependent signals - that is, resting-state brain activity - in the context of food intake are, however, less well studied.Objective: To compare eyes closed, whole-brain low-frequency BOLD signals between severely obese and normal-weight females, as assessed by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).Methods: Fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations were measured in the morning following an overnight fast in 17 obese (age: 39±11 years, body mass index (BMI): 42.3±4.8 kg m - 2) and 12 normal-weight females (age: 36±12 years, BMI: 22.7±1.8 kg m - 2), both before and 30 min after consumption of a standardized meal (∼260 kcal). Results: Compared with normal-weight controls, obese females had increased low-frequency activity in clusters located in the putamen, claustrum and insula (P<0.05). This group difference was not altered by food intake. Self-reported hunger dropped and plasma glucose concentrations increased after food intake (P<0.05); however, these changes did not differ between the BMI groups. Conclusion: Reward-related brain regions are more active under resting-state conditions in obese than in normal-weight females. This difference was independent of food intake under the experimental settings applied in the current study. Future studies involving males and females, as well as utilizing repeated post-prandial resting-state fMRI scans and various types of meals are needed to further investigate how food intake alters resting-state brain activity in obese humans.

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Hogenkamp, P. S., Zhou, W., Dahlberg, L. S., Stark, J., Larsen, A. L., Olivo, G., … Schiöth, H. B. (2016). Higher resting-state activity in reward-related brain circuits in obese versus normal-weight females independent of food intake. International Journal of Obesity, 40(11), 1687–1692. https://doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2016.105

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