Neuroimaging and obesity: current knowledge and future directions
Top Cited Papers
- 8 September 2011
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Obesity Reviews
- Vol. 13 (1), 43-56
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-789x.2011.00927.x
Abstract
Neuroimaging is becoming increasingly common in obesity research as investigators try to understand the neurological underpinnings of appetite and body weight in humans. Positron emission tomography (PET), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies examining responses to food intake and food cues, dopamine function and brain volume in lean vs. obese individuals are now beginning to coalesce in identifying irregularities in a range of regions implicated in reward (e.g. striatum, orbitofrontal cortex, insula), emotion and memory (e.g. amygdala, hippocampus), homeostatic regulation of intake (e.g. hypothalamus), sensory and motor processing (e.g. insula, precentral gyrus), and cognitive control and attention (e.g. prefrontal cortex, cingulate). Studies of weight change in children and adolescents, and those at high genetic risk for obesity, promise to illuminate causal processes. Studies examining specific eating behaviours (e.g. external eating, emotional eating, dietary restraint) are teaching us about the distinct neural networks that drive components of appetite, and contribute to the phenotype of body weight. Finally, innovative investigations of appetite‐related hormones, including studies of abnormalities (e.g. leptin deficiency) and interventions (e.g. leptin replacement, bariatric surgery), are shedding light on the interactive relationship between gut and brain. The dynamic distributed vulnerability model of eating behaviour in obesity that we propose has scientific and practical implications.Keywords
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relation of dietary restraint scores to activation of reward-related brain regions in response to food intake, anticipated intake, and food picturesNeuroImage, 2011
- Decreased dopamine type 2 receptor availability after bariatric surgery: Preliminary findingsBrain Research, 2010
- Body mass correlates inversely with inhibitory control in response to food among adolescent girls: An fMRI studyNeuroImage, 2010
- Cognitive impairment following high fat diet consumption is associated with brain inflammationJournal of Neuroimmunology, 2009
- Brain structure and obesityHuman Brain Mapping, 2009
- Effective connectivity of a reward network in obese womenBrain Research Bulletin, 2009
- Female emotional eaters show abnormalities in consummatory and anticipatory food reward: A functional magnetic resonance imaging studyInternational Journal of Eating Disorders, 2008
- Obesity and vulnerability of the CNSBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease, 2008
- Low dopamine striatal D2 receptors are associated with prefrontal metabolism in obese subjects: Possible contributing factorsNeuroImage, 2008
- Imaging dopamine's role in drug abuse and addictionNeuropharmacology, 2008