| Literature DB >> 31680149 |
Shannon D Donofry1,2, Chelsea M Stillman2, Kirk I Erickson2,3,4.
Abstract
Obesity is a major public health issue affecting nearly 40% of American adults and is associated with increased mortality and elevated risk for a number of physical and psychological illnesses. Obesity is associated with impairments in executive functions such as decision making and inhibitory control, as well as in reward valuation, which is thought to contribute to difficulty sustaining healthy lifestyle behaviors, including adhering to a healthy diet. Growing evidence indicates that these impairments are accompanied by disruptions in functional brain networks, particularly those that support self-regulation, reward valuation, self-directed thinking and homeostatic control. Weight-related differences in task-evoked and resting-state connectivity have most frequently been noted in the executive control network (ECN), salience network (SN) and default mode network (DMN), with obesity generally being associated with weakened connectivity in the ECN and enhanced connectivity in the SN and DMN. Similar disruptions have been observed in the much smaller literature examining the relationship between diet and disordered eating behaviors on functional network organization. The purpose of this narrative review was to summarize what is currently known about how obesity and eating behavior relate to functional brain networks, describe common patterns and provide recommendations for future research based on the identified gaps in knowledge.Entities:
Keywords: disordered eating; functional brain networks; functional connectivity; obesity; resting state
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31680149 PMCID: PMC7657447 DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsz085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci ISSN: 1749-5016 Impact factor: 3.436
Summary of studies investigating the relationship between functional connectivity and obesity
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| Cross-sectional | Resting-state FC among individuals with obesity prior to bariatric surgery | Seed-based resting-state FC plus graph theory; the authors did not specify which seed(s) they used. | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 33.11 (8.86) | Obese: 37.66 (5.07) | Obesity was associated with increased FC in the bilateral anterior cingulate cortex and precuneus and with decreased FC in the medial prefrontal cortex. Obesity predicted lower cluster coefficients and modularity and higher global efficiency, suggesting a shift toward more random networks. |
| Healthy weight: 45.03 (9.65) | Healthy weight: 22.64 (3.45) | |||||||
| Healthy weight: | *Significantly different | |||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship between obesity and FC during the regulation of food cravings; BMI was analyzed continuously. | PPI analysis during regulation of cravings |
| n/a | 26.7 (3.5) | 27.5 (5.3) | BMI was positively associated with FC between the putamen and dorsal lateral and medial prefrontal cortex during regulation of craving. |
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| Cross-sectional | Functional activation and FC in response to high- and low-calorie food cues | ICA | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 34.78 (4.45) | Obese: 34.89 (4.78) | During the presentation of high-calorie food, obesity was associated with reduced FC of lateral and medial prefrontal regions and precuneus. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 32.00 (5.87) | Healthy weight: 22.44 (1.93) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship of obesity with FC during a probabilistic learning task | PPI using the ventral striatum as the seed | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 29.5 (5.6) | Obese: 35.4 (4.5) | Individuals with obesity exhibited increased FC between the ventral striatum, insula and superior temporal gyrus during prediction error processing. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 30.0 (5.0) | Healthy weight: 22.5 (1.7) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Effect of weight on resting-state FC in weight discordant identical twins | ICA | Weight discordant twins: | n/a | Weight discordant twins: 29.4 (3.5) | Weight discordant twins: 28.1 (5.6) | In BMI-discordant twins, twins with lower BMI had stronger FC between striatal/thalamic and prefrontal networks. FC patterns observed in the BMI-discordant twin sample were not seen in a BMI-similar sample, providing evidence that the results are specific to BMI discordance. |
| Weight concordant twins: | Weight concordant twins: 28.5 (3.6) | Weight concordant twins: 25.6 (4.1) | ||||||
| Weight discordant unrelated individuals: | Weight discordant unrelated individuals: 29.3 (3.5) | Weight discordant unrelated individuals: 28.1 (5.7) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Functional activation and FC in response to high- and low-calorie food cues | PPI using nucleus accumbens, amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex as seeds | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 27.8 (6.2) | Obese: 30.8–41.2 | In response to high-calorie foods, individuals with obesity exhibited reduced amygdala FC with the orbitofrontal cortex and nucleus accumbens, but increased FC between orbitofrontal cortex and nucleus accumbens. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 28 (4.4) | Healthy weight: 19.7–24.5 | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Characterize FC during processing of food and monetary rewards | Graph theory | Excess weight: | n/a | Excess weight: 33.59 (6.23) | Excess weight: 30.41 (3.69) | Excess weight was associated with decreased FC during the processing of food rewards in a network involving primarily frontal and striatal areas and increased FC during the processing of monetary rewards in a network involving principally frontal and parietal areas. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 33 (6.53) | Healthy weight: 22.28 (1.77) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Associations between fasting and resting-state FC among individuals with obesity with and without type II diabetes (T2DM) | Seed-based resting-state FC using the posterior cingulate cortex, hypothalamus and amygdala as seeds | T2DM: | n/a | T2DM: 47.7 (6.4) | T2DM: 43.8 (3.2) | No significant differences between normal-glucose-tolerant and T2DM subjects were observed. In the fasting state, obesity was associated with stronger hypothalamic FC with the medial prefrontal cortex and the dorsal striatum. The amygdala was differentially connected to the right insula in those with obesity. Food intake dampened hypothalamic FC with the frontal regions in lean subjects, whereas these connections were not affected in those with obesity. |
| Non-T2DM: | Non-T2DM: 51 (7.1) | Non-T2DM: 42 (5.5) | ||||||
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 49.2 (6.22) | Healthy weight: 21.7 (1.6) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Associations between fasting and resting-state FC | Seed-based resting-state FC using the posterior cingulate cortex, hypothalamus and amygdala as seeds | Obese | n/a | Obese: 31 (3) | Obese: 35.4 (1.2) | At baseline, obesity was associated with stronger FC between hypothalamus and left insula. This effect diminished upon the prolonged fast. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 28 (3) | Healthy weight: 23.2 (0.5) | ||||||
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 27.05 (7.03) | Healthy Weight: 22.32 (19.52 to 25.09 kg m2) | ||||||
| SD not reported | ||||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Associations between obesity and resting FC of the nucleus accumbens | Seed-based resting-state FC using the nucleus accumbens as a seed | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 25.42 (5.86); | Obese: 31.83 (25.88 to 37.56 kg m2) | Subjects with high BMI had greater FC of the left nucleus accumbens with bilateral anterior cingulate cortex and right ventromedial prefrontal cortex. |
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship between BMI and resting-state FC of canonical networks; BMI was analyzed continuously. | Graph theory |
| n/a | 29 (Range of 22–37 years) | 26.6 (Range of 16.8–47.8 years) | Elevated BMI was associated with reduced functional cohesion and increased integration of sensory-driven networks (sensorimotor and visual) and internally guided networks (default mode and central executive). |
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship between BMI and resting-state FC of canonical networks; BMI was analyzed continuously. | ICA |
| n/a | 70.1 (3.8) | 27.5 (4.1) | Higher BMI was significantly associated with lower default mode FC in the posterior cingulate cortex and precuneus. |
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship between obesity and resting-state FC | Resting-state FC between 90 regions defined using the AAL atlas | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 42.7 (11.1) | Obese: 33.4 (3.9) | Obesity was associated with global and local network efficiency as well as decreased modularity. In regional metrics, the putamen, pallidum and thalamus exhibited significantly decreased nodal degree and efficiency among individuals with obesity. Obesity was also associated with decreased FC of cortico-striatal/cortico-thalamic networks. |
| BED: | BED: 43.7 (9.6) | BED: 33.0 (2.4) | ||||||
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 41.8 (11.7) | Healthy weight: 22.5 (2.0) | ||||||
| Garcia-Garcia | Cross-sectional | Relationship between obesity and resting-state FC | Graph theory | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 33.55 (5.61) | Obese: 35.90 (5.83) | Individuals with obesity exhibited less degree centrality in the left middle frontal gyrus and the lateral occipital cortex. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 31.33 (5.96) | Healthy weight: 22.33 (1.87) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Effect of gastric bypass surgery on resting-state and task-evoked (food cue) FC | ICA | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 42.6 (4.0) | Obese: 40.2 (0.8) | Individuals with obesity who had not undergone surgery exhibited stronger FC in frontal regions of the DMN during resting state compared to healthy weight individuals and those who underwent surgery. |
| Bypass surgery: | Bypass surgery: 42.0 (2.8) | Bypass surgery: 27.1 (0.9) | ||||||
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 36.6 (3.8) | Healthy weight: 21.4 (0.5) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Sex differences in neural responsitivity to food cues | PPI analysis; seed-based FC on amygdala in response to high- | Female: | n/a | Female: 35 (6.9) | Female: 36.9 (5.6) | In response to high- |
| Male: | Male: 35 (9.0) | Male: 36.2 (5.5) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Functional activation and FC in response to high and low calorie visual and auditory food cues | PPI analysis of a visual food cue task | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 22.4 (2) | Obese: 32.9 (5.3) | Individuals with obesity exhibited greater response to high-calorie cues, as well as relatively greater FC between the ventral tegmental area and cerebellum. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 21 (1.2) | Healthy weight: 22.1 (1.2) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Global brain FC during anticipation and tasting of a milkshake | Seed-based FC during the tasting of a milkshake | Healthy weight: | n/a | Obese: 27.7 (1.7) | Obese: 35.3 (.9) | At rest and during milkshake consumption, global FC was consistently decreased in the ventromedial and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, insula and caudate nucleus and was increased in brain regions belonging to the dorsal attention network including premotor areas, superior parietal lobule and visual cortex. |
| Obese: | Healthy weight: 27.4 (1.7) | Healthy weight: 21.9 (.5) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship between obesity and FC during a visual food cue task | ICA | Obese/overweight: | n/a | Obese/overweight: 24.66 (2.42) | Obese/overweight: 30.46 (1.77) | Overweight/obesity was associated with increased FC of the salience network and networks involved in object recognition, motivational salience. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 22.91 (2.1) | Healthy weight: 21.16 (1.13) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | Functional activation and FC in response to high- and low-calorie food cues | PPI analysis | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 45.72 (9.60) | Obese: 43.97 (3.74) | Obesity was associated with increased FC between the caudate nucleus and the amygdala, posterior insula and somatosensory cortex during the presentation of high calorie food. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 47.75 (10.44) | Healthy weight: 24.10 (2.07) | ||||||
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| Cross-sectional | FC during craving regulation | PPI analysis | Obese: | n/a | Obese: 42.1 (9.3) | Obese: 41.4 (3.9) | Obesity was associated with higher FC in the executive control network during craving regulation. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 44.9 (11.9) | Healthy weight: 22.6 (2.7) | ||||||
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| Longitudinal | Effects of a 6 month exercise program on resting-state FC | BNC with ICA |
| 9% ( | 33.6 (1.4) | 38.2 (3.2) | BNC in the posterior cingulate cortex was reduced following chronic exercise; change in BNC was related to changes in aerobic fitness level and perceived hunger. |
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| Longitudinal | Resting-state FC after surgical and behavioral weight loss | Seed-based resting-state FC using mPFC, precuneus and inferior temporal gyrus | Bariatric surgery: | 13% ( | Bariatric surgery: 42 (10.35) | Bariatric surgery: 41.35 (1.97) | Following weight loss, behavioral dieters exhibited increased FC between left precuneus/superior parietal lobule and bilateral insula pre- to post-meal and bariatric patients exhibited decreased FC between these regions pre- to post-meal. |
| Behavioral diet: | Behavioral diet: 40.23 (8.01) | Behavioral diet: 40.10 (1.8) | ||||||
| Li | Longitudinal | Resting-state FC among individuals with obesity who were awaiting bariatric surgery and a subset of that group who completed surgery | Resting-state FC between 90 regions defined using the AAL atlas | Preoperative: | 24% ( | Preoperative: 27.8 (6.9) | Preoperative: 40.0 (6.5) | Pre-operative individuals exhibited increased FC in orbitofrontal cortex, MFG and superior frontal gyrus. Post-surgery, these differences were no longer present. |
| Postoperative: | Postoperative: Not described | Postoperative: 34.4 (5.9) | ||||||
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 26.7 (6.8) | Healthy weight: 21.8 (1.8) | ||||||
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| Longitudinal | FC during a dietary impulse healthy weight task as a predictor of weight loss | PPI using ventromedial prefrontal cortex as the seed |
| NR | 43.0 (12.2) | Pre-diet BMI: 34.5 (3.2) | Stronger FC between the dorsolateral and ventromedial prefrontal cortex was associated with better dietary success and impulse control. |
| Post-diet BMI: 30.2 (1.8) | ||||||||
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| Longitudinal | Relationship between obesity and resting-state FC | Seed-based resting-state FC using the nucleus accumbens as a seed | Obese: | 28% ( | Obese: 33.59 (6.16) | Obese: 30.51 (3.63) | Participants with excess weight displayed increased FC between the ventral striatum and the medial prefrontal and parietal cortices and between the dorsal striatum and the somatosensory cortex. Dorsal striatum FC correlated with food craving and predicted BMI gains. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 33.07 (6.73) | Healthy weight: 22.09 (1.74) | ||||||
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| Longitudinal | Effects of exercise on resting-state default mode and salience network activity in overweight/obese adults | ICA |
| 0% | 32.8 (9.5) | 33.3 (4.3) | The intervention was associated with a reduction in DMN activity in the precuneus, which was associated with greater fat mass loss as well as reduced perceived hunger and hunger ratings in response to a meal. No changes were observed in the salience network in response to the exercise intervention. |
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| Randomized cross-over design comparing fed and fasted states | Effect of weight loss on FC of the DMN during the presentation of high calorie food cues | ICA | Reduced-obese: | NR | Reduced-obese: 35.2 (5.7) | Reduced-obese: 27.5 (2.6) | In the eucaloric state, greater activity among individuals who lost weight, compared to healthy weight individuals, was observed in the lateral inferior parietal and posterior cingulate cortices. Lateral parietal activity correlated positively with appetite. Overfeeding was associated with increased posterior cingulate default network activity in healthy weight individuals compared to those who lost weight. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 34.7 (5.4) | Healthy weight: 21.6 (1.7) | ||||||
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| Randomized cross-over design comparing placebo | FC of the hypothalamus during reduced-weight maintenance and leptin repletion | PPI analysis using the right hypothalamus as the seed |
| NR | 36.8 (6.5) | Initial: 39.9 (8.2) | During reduced-weight maintenance with placebo injections, the FC of the hypothalamus increased with visual areas and the dorsal anterior cingulate in response to food cues. During reduced-weight maintenance with leptin injections, FC of the right hypothalamus increased with the mid-insula and the central and parietal operculae, suggesting increased coupling with the interoceptive system and decreased with the orbital frontal cortex, frontal pole and the dorsal anterior cingulate. |
| Following weight loss: 34.8 (7.0) | ||||||||
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| RCT | Effect of two dietary manipulations on task-evoked FC | PPI analysis | Meal replacement (TMR) group: | 12.5% ( | TMR: 31.27 (11.85) | TMR: 35.14 (3.75) | Compared to TD, TMR was also associated with negative modulation of FC of the nucleus accumbens, orbitofrontal cortex and amygdala by dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. |
| Typical diet (TD) group: | TD: 32.15 (14.67) | TD: 34.82 (2.63) | ||||||
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| RCT | Examine the relationship between BMI and successful inhibition during an inhibitory control task; BMI was analyzed continuously. | PPI analysis with IFG as the seed |
| 24% ( | 32.6 (10.6) | 30.7 (6.3) | Positive correlations were found between BMI and impulsivity. Further, there was a positive association between BMI and FC between the right IFG and right middle frontal gyrus during successful response inhibition. |
| Mehl | RCT | Task-evoked FC during cognitive bias modification training and resting-state FC after training | PPI analysis using the angular gyrus as a seed. Resting-state FC using dorsolateral and medial prefrontal cortex, amygdala, nucleus accumbens and MFG as seeds | Cognitive bias modification: | NR | Cognitive bias modification: 28(5) | Cognitive bias modification: 35.57 (4.63) | Analysis of brain FC during rest revealed training-related FC changes of the inferior frontal gyrus and bilateral middle frontal gyri. |
| Healthy weight: | Healthy weight: 31 (4) | Healthy weight: 6.95 (7.63) | ||||||
| *Significantly different |
Note. BNC, between-network FC; PPI, psychophysiological interaction; FC, functional connectivity; ICA, independent component analysis; RCT, randomized controlled trial; NR, not reported.
Summary of studies investigating the relationship between FC, disordered eating and diet
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| Cross-sectional | Eating disorder pathology and FC of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex | Seed-based resting-state FC; voxel-mirrored homotopic resting-state FC | Restrained eaters: | n/a | Restrained eaters: 20.74 (1.51); healthy controls: 21.04 (1.85) | Restrained eaters: 21.09 (2.38); controls: 21.01 (2.50) | Restrained eaters exhibited reduced interhemispheric connectivity of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, which was associated with higher BN symptoms. Increased dorsolateral prefrontal cortex resting-state connectivity was associated with BN pathology but only among restrained eaters. |
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| Cross-sectional | The relationship between eating disorder diagnosis and resting-state FC of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex | Seed-based resting-state FC of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex | AN: | n/a | AN: 25.2 (4.2); BN: 22.9 (3.9); healthy controls: 23.3 (1.8) | AN: 16.0 (1.7); BN: 21.6 (2.3); healthy controls: 19.9 (1.9) | AN group exhibited stronger synchronous activity between the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and retrosplenial cortex, whereas the BN group showed stronger synchronous activity between the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and medial orbitofrontal cortex. Both groups demonstrated stronger synchronous activity between the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and precuneus, which correlated with higher scores of the Body Shape Questionnaire. |
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| Cross-sectional | The relationship between BN diagnosis and FC of salience, executive control, somatosensory, DMNs | Seed-based resting-state FC using a single node from each network of interest as a seed | BN: | n/a | BN: 23 (5); healthy controls: 23 (3) | BN: 21 (2); healthy controls: 22 (2) | BN group showed a decreased resting FC both within the somatosensory network and with posterior cingulate cortex and two visual areas (the right middle occipital gyrus and the right cuneus). |
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship between resting-state connectivity assessed via graph theory and BN diagnosis | Resting-state connectivity assessed via graph theory | BN: | n/a | BN: 22 (3.4); healthy controls: 23.1 (3.4) | BN: 21.0 (2.6); healthy controls: 20.5 (1.4) | Nodal strength in BN was higher in the sensorimotor and visual regions as well as the precuneus, but lower in several subcortical regions, such as the hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus and orbitofrontal cortex. BN group also showed hypoconnectivity involving subcortical limbic and paralimbic regions, which correlated significantly with scores of bulimia and drive for thinness. |
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| Cross-sectional | Relationship between resting-state connectivity and eating disorder diagnosis | Seed-based resting-state connectivity | BED: | n/a | BED: 38.39 (13.06); BN: 27.45 (10.55); healthy weight controls: 26.86 (6.59); overweight controls: 39.40 (10.48) | BED: 32.64 (4.13); BN: 21.33 (2.99); healthy weight controls: 21.85 (1.80); overweight controls: 33.58 (4.54) | ED patients exhibited aberrant FC in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex within the salience network, as well as in the medial prefrontal cortex. Furthermore, BED and BN groups differed from each other in FC within each network. Seed-based analysis revealed stronger synchronous dorsal anterior cingulate cortex-retrosplenial cortex activity in the BN group. |
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| Cross-sectional | Resting-state VMHC | VMHC | AN: | n/a | AN: 25.3 (1.6); BN: 27.2 (2.0); healthy controls: 26.1 (3.5) | AN: 16.8 (1.6); BN: not reported; healthy controls: 21.1 (1.6) | Compared to HC, AN patients exhibited reduced VMHC in cerebellum, insula and precuneus, while BN patients showed reduced VMHC in dorsolateral prefrontal and orbitofrontal cortices. |
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| Cross-sectional | Effective connectivity between regions involved in energy homeostasis and reward during the ingestion of a sucrose solution among individuals with an ED diagnosis | Effective connectivity | AN: | n/a | AN: 23.23 (5.26); BN: 24.64 (3.22); healthy controls: 24.39 (3.49) | AN: 16.23 (1.09); BN: 23.56 (5.89); healthy controls: 21.61 (1.21) | Only the controls had an effective connectivity pattern from the hypothalamus to ventral striatum bilaterally. On the right side both eating-disorder groups showed effective connectivity from the anterior cingulate to ventral striatum and from there to the hypothalamus. Both AN and BN showed effective connectivity on the left from ventral anterior insula to inferior orbitofrontal cortex, middle to inferior orbitofrontal cortex and dorsal to ventral anterior insula. |
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| Cross-sectional | Task-evoked FC of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex in response to food cues among individuals who binge eat | Seed-based connectivity, PPI | Binge eating: | n/a | Binge eating: 22.1 (2.3); healthy controls: 21.3 (0.6) | Binge eating: 27.4 (5.8); healthy controls: 27.7 (7.2) | In response to high-calorie ( |
| Kim | Cross-sectional | Task-evoked functional and effective connectivity of the anterior insula during the processing of food cues | Seed-based connectivity, PPI with anterior insula as the region on interest | AN: | n/a | AN: 25.2 (4.2); BN: 22.9 (3.9); healthy controls: 23.3 (1.8) | AN: 16.0 (1.7); BN: 21.6 (2.3); healthy controls: 19.9 (1.9) | In response to food images compared to non-food images, both the AN group and BN group demonstrated increased activity in the left anterior insula. In the AN group, the left anterior insula demonstrated significant interactions with the right insula and right IFG. In the BN group, the left anterior insula demonstrated significant interactions with the medial orbitofrontal cortex. |
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| Cross-sectional | Task-evoked connectivity during anticipation and receipt of a chocolate milkshake | Seed-based connectivity, PPI with amygdala as the ROI | Subthreshold BN: | n/a | 20.3 (1.87); subgroup means not reported | BN: 23.93 (2.82); healthy controls: 23.19 (2.42) | Connectivity analyses revealed a greater relation of amygdala activity to activation in the left putamen and insula during anticipated receipt of milkshake in the BN group relative to the control group. The opposite pattern was found for the taste of milkshake. |
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| Cross-sectional | FC of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex during a food choice task | Seed-based PPI with dorsolateral prefrontal cortex as the ROI | BN: | n/a | BN: 24 (3.87); healthy controls: 23 (2.70) | BN: 19.9 (2.15); healthy controls: 21.3 (2.36) | BN patients chose unhealthy food more often. FC analysis showed that the activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was coupled with ventromedial prefrontal cortex activity in uncontrolled food choices. |
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| Garcia-Casares | Longitudinal intervention (no control group) | Resting-state seed-based connectivity | Seed-based |
| 15.8% ( | 46.31 (4.07) | 38.15 (4.7) | After the intervention, there was decreased FC between the left inferior parietal cortex and the right temporal cortex, and bilateral posterior cingulate; decreased connectivity between the left superior frontal gyrus and the right temporal cortex; decreased connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and the somatosensory cortex; and decreased connectivity between the left and right posterior cingulate. |
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| Cross-sectional | Whole-brain connectivity | Multivariate distance-based matrix regression |
| n/a | 69.0 (3.0) | 26.0 (4.0) | Omega 3 levels were associated with individual differences in FC within regions that support executive function (prefrontal cortex), memory (hippocampus) and emotion (amygdala). |
Note. ED, eating disorder; PPI, psychophysiological interaction; FC, functional connectivity; VMHC, voxel-mirrored homotopic connectivity.