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Obesity Facts 2012

Functional neuroimaging in craniopharyngioma: a useful tool to better understand hypothalamic obesity?

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Christian L Roth
Elizabeth Aylward
Olivia Liang
Natalia M Kleinhans
Gregory Pauley
Ellen A Schur

Palabras clave

Abstracto

OBJECTIVE

To use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in craniopharyngioma (CP) patients to examine the hypothesis that hypothalamic damage due to CP and its treatment results in enhanced perception of food reward and/or impaired central satiety processing.

METHODS

Pre- and post-meal responses to visual food cues in brain regions of interest (ROI; bilateral nucleus accumbens, bilateral insula, and medial orbitofrontal cortex) were assessed in 4 CP patients versus 4 age- and weight-matched controls. Stimuli consisted of images of high- ('fattening') and low-calorie ('non-fattening') foods in blocks, alternating with non-food object blocks. After the first fMRI scan, subjects drank a high-calorie test meal to suppress appetite, then completed a second fMRI scan. Within each ROI, we calculated mean z-scores for activation by fattening as compared to non-fattening food images.

RESULTS

Following the test meal, controls showed suppression of activation by food cues while CP patients showed trends towards higher activation.

CONCLUSIONS

These data, albeit in a small group of patients, support our hypothesis that perception of food cues may be altered in hypothalamic obesity (HO), especially after eating, i.e. in the satiated state. The fMRI approach is encouraging for performing future mechanistic studies of the brain response to food cues and satiety in patients with hypothalamic or other forms of childhood obesity.

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