| Literature DB >> 24027581 |
Michelle Murphy1, Julian G Mercer.
Abstract
A substantial proportion of noncommunicable disease originates in habitual overconsumption of calories, which can lead to weight gain and obesity and attendant comorbidities. At the other end of the spectrum, the consequences of undernutrition in early life and at different stages of adult life can also have major impact on wellbeing and quality of life. To help address some of these issues, greater understanding is required of interactions with food and contemporary diets throughout the life course and at a number of different levels: physiological, metabolic, psychological, and emotional. Here we review the current literature on the effects of dietary manipulation on anxiety-like behaviour. This evidence, assembled from study of preclinical models of diet challenge from gestation to adult life, supports a role for diet in the important connections between psychology, physiology, and behaviour. Analogous processes in the human population in our current obesogenic environment are likely to contribute to individual and societal challenges in this area.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24027581 PMCID: PMC3762204 DOI: 10.1155/2013/701967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-8337 Impact factor: 3.257
Common tests of anxiety.
| Test | Indicator of anxiety | Additional uses/outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Mazes (T maze, Y maze, elevated plus maze, O maze) | Decreased time in open (unwalled) sections | Activity, speed, and cognition |
| Light dark box | Decreased time in light box | Activity and speed |
| Open field | Less time in centre regions | Activity and speed |
| Sucrose preference | Decreased consumption of sucrose | Anhedonia |
| Locomotor activity | Decreased activity | Activity, speed, and rearing behaviours |
| Marble burying | Increased compulsive burying behaviour | Compulsion, impulsivity, and neophobia |
| Novel object | Decreased exploration of unfamiliar object | Activity, speed, memory, impulsivity, and neophobia |
Figure 1Factors implicated in mediating the effects of diet on anxiety. This illustrates some of the conflicting results from various palatable diet regimes and shows the complexity in deducing the pathways by which diets regulate anxiety levels. Numbers refer to associated referenced work.