Literature DB >> 9438966

The interaction of diet and stress in rats: high-energy food and sucrose treatment.

N K Dess1, S Choe, T R Minor.   

Abstract

Exposure to inescapable shock typically reduces eating and body weight in rats. The present study examined the modulation of stress effects by prestress diet and poststress sugar availability. Maintenance on a high-fat, high-energy food attenuated stress-induced weight loss and anorexia and increased high-energy food selection when a low-energy wet mash was the only alternative. Access to sugar after stress also reduced short-term weight loss; among rats maintained on high-energy food, body weight was spared absolutely. The dependence of stress effects on pre- and poststress diet alternatives may speak to individual differences in the stress-eating relationship in humans. More generally, these results support a conceptualization of stress in terms of metabolic challenge and the integrated reorganization of energy regulatory processes.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9438966     DOI: 10.1037//0097-7403.24.1.60

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process        ISSN: 0097-7403


  9 in total

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8.  Neural effects of acute stress on appetite: A magnetoencephalography study.

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9.  Acute Stress Exposure Alters Food-Related Brain Monoaminergic Profiles in a Rat Model of Anorexia.

Authors:  Carter H Reed; Ella E Bauer; Allyse Shoeman; Trevor J Buhr; Peter J Clark
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  9 in total

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