Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2844755 | Physiology & Behavior | 2011 | 5 Pages |
Obesity is a serious and growing public health problem in the United States and the world. While weight loss is associated with significant benefits in obesity-related co-morbidities, successful long-term weight loss maintenance is extremely difficult. This limited success is primarily due to biologic mechanisms that clearly favor weight regain. The weight-reduced state is associated with not only reductions in energy expenditure and changes in substrate metabolism but also in increased energy intake. Measures of appetite (increased hunger, reduced satiety) clearly change with weight loss. These changes in appetite may be mediated by alterations of peripheral appetite-related signals, such as leptin and meal-related gut peptides, promoting energy intake. Furthermore, significant changes in the neuronal response to food-related cues in the weight-reduced state have also been shown, stressing the importance of the interactions between homeostatic and non-homeostatic regulation of energy intake. In summary, the weight-reduced state is clearly associated with a dysregulation of energy balance regulation, resulting in a milieu promoting weight regain, and thus being one of the major obstacles of “treating” obesity and reducing its comorbidities. This paper will review the adaptations in the central regulation of energy intake that occur after weight-loss or in the weight-reduce state in humans, including changes in peripheral appetite-related signals and neuroimaging studies examining the brain's response to weight loss.
Research highlights► Long-term weight loss success is extremely difficult. ► Weight reduced-state is associated with biologic mechanisms that favor weight regain. ► Weight loss is associated with increased appetite. ► Changes in appetite may be mediated by alterations of peripheral appetite signals. ► Neuronal response to food is altered in weight-reduced, promoting motivation to eat.