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    Differential effect of glucose ingestion on the neural processing of food stimuli in lean and overweight adults.
        
        Hum. Brain Mapp. 35, 918-928 (2014)
    
    
    
				Eating behavior is crucial in the development of obesity and Type 2 diabetes. To further investigate its regulation, we studied the effects of glucose versus water ingestion on the neural processing of visual high and low caloric food cues in 12 lean and 12 overweight subjects by functional magnetic resonance imaging. We found body weight to substantially impact the brain's response to visual food cues after glucose versus water ingestion. Specifically, there was a significant interaction between body weight, condition (water versus glucose), and caloric content of food cues. Although overweight subjects showed a generalized reduced response to food objects in the fusiform gyrus and precuneus, the lean group showed a differential pattern to high versus low caloric foods depending on glucose versus water ingestion. Furthermore, we observed plasma insulin and glucose associated effects. The hypothalamic response to high caloric food cues negatively correlated with changes in blood glucose 30 min after glucose ingestion, while especially brain regions in the prefrontal cortex showed a significant negative relationship with increases in plasma insulin 120 min after glucose ingestion. We conclude that the postprandial neural processing of food cues is highly influenced by body weight especially in visual areas, potentially altering visual attention to food. Furthermore, our results underline that insulin markedly influences prefrontal activity to high caloric food cues after a meal, indicating that postprandial hormones may be potential players in modulating executive control.
			
			
		Impact Factor
					Scopus SNIP
					Web of Science
Times Cited
					Times Cited
Scopus
Cited By
					
					Cited By
Altmetric
					
				6.878
					1.781
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        Publikationstyp
        Artikel: Journalartikel
    
 
    
        Dokumenttyp
        Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
    
 
     
    
    
        Schlagwörter
        Insulin ; Obesity ; Fmri ; Food; High-calorie Foods; Positron-emission-tomography; Human Hypothalamic Responses; Central-nervous-system; Insulin Sensitivity; Functional Mri; Human Brain; Obesity; Humans; Activation
    
 
     
    
    
        Sprache
        englisch
    
 
    
        Veröffentlichungsjahr
        2014
    
 
    
        Prepublished im Jahr 
        2013
    
 
    
        HGF-Berichtsjahr
        2013
    
 
    
    
        ISSN (print) / ISBN
        1065-9471
    
 
    
        e-ISSN
        1097-0193
    
 
     
     
     
	     
	 
	 
    
        Zeitschrift
        Human Brain Mapping
    
 
		
    
        Quellenangaben
        
	    Band: 35,  
	    Heft: 3,  
	    Seiten: 918-928 
	    
	    
	
    
 
  
         
        
            Verlag
            Wiley
        
 
        
            Verlagsort
            Hoboken
        
 
	
         
         
         
         
         
	
         
         
         
    
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
    
        Begutachtungsstatus
        Peer reviewed
    
 
    
        Institut(e)
        Institute of Diabetes Research and Metabolic Diseases (IDM)
German Center for Diabetes Reseach (DZD)
 
    German Center for Diabetes Reseach (DZD)
        POF Topic(s)
        90000 - German Center for Diabetes Research
    
 
    
        Forschungsfeld(er)
        Helmholtz Diabetes Center
    
 
    
        PSP-Element(e)
        G-502400-001
    
 
     
     	
    
        PubMed ID
        23307469
    
    
    
        WOS ID
        WOS:000334398500014
    
    
        Erfassungsdatum
        2013-12-17