Indulging in fatty foods could destroy stomach's signals to the
brain, according to a new study which gives insight why many dieters
tend to regain the weight after losing it.
New University of Adelaide research has found the nerves in the
stomach which signal fullness to the brain appeared to be desensitised
after long-term consumption of a high-fat diet.
The findings could explain why many dieters tend to regain the weight they have lost.
PhD student Stephen Kentish investigated the impact of high-fat
diets on the ability of the gut to signal its fullness, and whether
those changes revert back to normal by
losing weight.
Study leader Associate Professor Amanda Page said laboratory
studies showed the stomach's nerve response does not return to normal
upon a return to a normal diet.
"This means you would need to eat more food before you felt the same degree of fullness as a healthy individual," she said.
"A hormone in the body, leptin, known to regulate food intake,
can also change the sensitivity of the nerves in the stomach that signal
fullness.
"In normal conditions, leptin acts to stop food intake. However,
in the stomach in high-fat diet induced obesity, leptin further
desensitises the nerves that detect fullness."
Associate Professor Page said the two mechanisms combined meant
that obese people needed to eat more to feel full, which fuels their
obesity cycle.
She said the results had "very strong implications for obese
people, those trying to lose weight, and those who are trying to
maintain their weight loss".
"Unfortunately, our results show that the nerves in the stomach
remain desensitised to fullness after weight loss has been achieved,"
she said.
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