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Diabetes dietary management alters responses to food pictures in brain regions associated with motivation and emotion: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 19:54 authored by M Chechlacz, P Rotshtein, S Klamer, H Pressl, K Porubska, S Higgs, D Booth, H Abele, N Birbaumer, A NouwenAims/hypothesis We hypothesised that living with type 2 diabetes would enhance responses to pictures of foods in brain regions known to be involved in learnt food sensory motivation and that these stronger activations would relate to scores for dietary adherence in diabetes and to measures of potential difficulties in adherence. Methods We compared brain responses to food images of 11 people with type 2 diabetes and 12 healthy control participants, matched for age and weight, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Results Having type 2 diabetes increased responses to pictured foods in the insula, orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and basal ganglia and, within these regions, the effect of the fat content of the foods was larger in participants with type 2 diabetes than in healthy controls. Furthermore, increased activation to food within the insula and OFC positively correlated with external eating, dietary self-efficacy and dietary self-care. In contrast, responses within subcortical structures (amygdala and basal ganglia) were positively correlated with emotional eating and rated appetite for the food stimuli and negatively correlated with dietary self-care. Conclusions/interpretation Type 2 diabetes is associated with changes in brain responses to food that are modulated by dietary self-care. We propose that this is linked to the need to follow a life-long restrictive diet
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
DiabetologiaISSN
0012-186XPublisher
Springer VerlagExternal DOI
Issue
3Volume
52Page range
524-533Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes