Brain chemistry causes some people to notice food more

Brain chemistry may make some people notice food more easily, which can tempt overeating even in people who are not overweight, scientists say.

Brain chemistry causes some people to notice food more

London: Brain chemistry may make some people notice food more easily, which can tempt overeating even in people who are not overweight, scientists say.

Researchers in a study found that dopamine activity in the striatum, an area of the brain sensitive to food reward is linked to how quickly men noticed a food picture hidden among neutral pictures.

In turn, the men who quickly noticed food pictures also ate more.

"We do know that in human obesity the striatal dopamine system is affected, but interesting enough we know little about the striatal dopamine system of young, healthy individuals and how it relates to the motivation to eat," said Susanne la Fleur from the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam, who directed the study linking dopamine, attention to food, and eating.

Ordinarily the burst of dopamine during a rewarding activity is eventually stopped when it is re-absorbed into the cells it came from.

That re-uptake process requires a brain chemical called "dopamine transporter" (DAT). Lower DAT means dopamine is reabsorbed more slowly, causing it to keep acting on the brain.

The researchers scanned brains of healthy, non-obese young men to determine available DAT. The men completed a computerised visual attention task to see how quickly they could detect food pictures among neutral pictures.

Subjects were also asked to report food intake during seven days.

The researchers found that the men with lower DAT, which means higher dopamine activity, showed a stronger visual attention bias towards food, detecting food pictures more quickly.

"We could speculate that in healthy humans dopamine does motivate eating, however although we did observe a correlation between striatal dopamine transporter binding and the visual attention bias for food; and between visual attention bias for food and actual food intake, we did not observe a correlation between striatal dopamine transporter binding and actual food intake," said la Fleur.

"Thus, a factor in addition to dopamine must be involved in going from being motivated to actual eating," la Fleur added.

The research was presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior (SSIB) in Seattle.  

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