Literature DB >> 35067848

Appetitive interoception, the hippocampus and western-style diet.

Terry L Davidson1, Richard J Stevenson2.   

Abstract

Obesity, Type 2 diabetes and other metabolic disorders continue to pose serious challenges to human health and well-being. An important source of these challenges is the overconsumption of saturated fats and sugar, main staples of what has been called the Western-style diet (WD). The current paper describes a theoretical model and supporting evidence that links intake of a WD to interference with a specific brain substrate that underlies processing of interoceptive signals of hunger and satiety. We review findings from rats and humans that the capacity of these signals to modulate the strength of appetitive and eating behavior depends on the functional integrity of the hippocampus and the learning memory operations it performs. Important among these operations is the use of contextual information to retrieve memories that are associated with other events. Within our framework, satiety provides an interoceptive context that informs animals that food cues and appetitive behavior will not be followed by rewarding postingestive outcomes. This serves to prevent those cues and responses from retrieving those reward memories. The findings reviewed provide evidence that consuming a WD and the high amounts of saturated fat and sugar it contains (a) is associated with the emergence of pathophysiologies to which the hippocampus appears selectively vulnerable (b) impairs hippocampal-dependent learning and memory (HDLM) and (c) weakens behavioral control by interoceptive hunger and satiety contextual stimuli. It is hypothesized that these consequences of WD intake may establish the conditions for a vicious cycle of further WD intake, obesity, and potentially cognitive decline.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Eating; Inhibition; Memory; Obesity; Satiety

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35067848     DOI: 10.1007/s11154-021-09698-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Endocr Metab Disord        ISSN: 1389-9155            Impact factor:   9.306


  1 in total

Review 1.  Foreword to the special issue on the neuroscience of obesity and related disorders.

Authors:  Trevor Steward; Christina E Wierenga
Journal:  Rev Endocr Metab Disord       Date:  2022-06-13       Impact factor: 9.306

  1 in total

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