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  • Are obese brainsaddictedto sugar?

  • Hello everyone! I’m Crystal here with DNews. Now I don’t know about you, but I had really

  • strict parents and they rarely let me eat sugar as a kid. And now that I’m an adult,

  • candy basically makes up one of my major food groups. According to a new study out of the

  • University of California San Diego, the brains of some children respond differently to sugar

  • than others and are more likely to appearaddictedto sugar.

  • The discovery that addicted brains are structurally and functionally different from non-addicted

  • brains is not new, but this study reveals that those neurological changes can happen

  • very young, while the brain is still developing.

  • Those of you who watch a lot of these videos probably already know that the brain matures

  • back to front, with the frontal cortex (which is responsible for our rational decision making

  • abilities) maturing last, in our early twenties. At adolescence the regions of our brains that

  • are responsible for emotion andreward” (that happy feeling we get when we encounter

  • something we like) are fully on-line before we have the ability to regulate and control

  • our reactions to them and this fact has been used to explain why adolescents, who physically

  • appear very adult, make decisions that are so. very. dumb. (sorry mom)

  • Approaching obesity as a symptom of food addiction, Scientists at UCSD examined the brains of

  • obese and non-obese pre adolescent children using fMRI to identify any functional differences

  • in their response to sugar. The children’s ages ranged from 8 to 12 and they were asked

  • to close their eyes and focus on the taste of a sugar-water solution while they swirled

  • it around in their mouth.

  • The resulting images showed that obese children had more activity in the insular cortex and

  • amygdala, brain regions associated with emotion, perception, contextual awareness and taste.

  • But what was most surprising, is that the obese children did not show any increased

  • response to sugar in the striatum.

  • The striatum is involved in our perception of salience, which is how much an item or

  • experience stands out when compared to others and it is also known to play an important

  • role in our experience of reward so scientists were surprised to see no increase in activity

  • in children they tested. This result was also surprising because increased activity in the

  • striatum has been associated with obesity in adults.

  • The DA reward pathway involving the striatum, substantia nigra, nucleus accumbens and the

  • ventral tegmental area is the accepted neuroscientific roadmap for how we experience pleasure and

  • develop addictions (ask me about my thesis sometime) but we are starting to learn more

  • about the role of the amygdala in emotional regulation in the development of addiction

  • states. A recent rodent study showed that clinical activation of the amygdala in a lever

  • press experiment made a sugar solution MOREADDICTIVE” (or at least more rewarding).

  • So it may be that rats and children whose amygdala activation in response to sugar are

  • more likely to seek out sweets due to the emotional memory of the experience.

  • Obviously there are many causes for obesity and food addiction is just one of them. Are

  • scientists going down the right path? Subscribe to D News and let us know in the comments

  • down below! You can also come find me on twitter at PolyCrystalHD

Are obese brainsaddictedto sugar?

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