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Diet Lifestyle Weight and Obesity

The Science of Comfort Foods

12 years, 9 months ago

10120  0
Posted on Aug 18, 2011, 6 a.m.

Belgian team explores the relationship between food intake and emotional state.

It is well known that there is an intimate relationship between emotional state and food intake —when we are overworked and stressed, comfort foods can makes us feel better. Lukas Van Oudenhove, from University of Leuven (Belgium), and colleagues have imaged changes in the brain when healthy nonobese individuals experience sadness. Reporting that the administration of a fat solution to the stomach attenuated the behavioral and nerve cell responses to sad emotion, the researchers submit that: “These findings increase our understanding of the interplay among emotions, hunger, food intake, and meal-induced sensations in health, which may have important implications for a wide range of disorders, including obesity, eating disorders, and depression.”

Lukas Van Oudenhove, Shane McKie, Daniel Lassman, Bilal Uddin, Peter Paine, Steven Coen, Lloyd Gregory, Jan Tack, Qasim Aziz.  “Fatty acid–induced gut-brain signaling attenuates neural and behavioral effects of sad emotion in humans.” Journal of Clinical Investigation, August 1, 2011.

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