• Nutrition · Jul 2013

    Brain activity correlated with food preferences: a functional study comparing advanced non-small cell lung cancer patients with and without anorexia.

    • Karla Sánchez-Lara, Oscar Arrieta, Eric Pasaye, Alessandro Laviano, Roberto E Mercadillo, Ricardo Sosa-Sánchez, and Nahum Méndez-Sánchez.
    • Oncology Center Médica Sur Clinic, Mexico City, México. ksanchez@medicasur.org.mx
    • Nutrition. 2013 Jul 1;29(7-8):1013-9.

    ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to examine the brain activity manifested while non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with and without anorexia were exposed to visual food stimuli.MethodsWe included 26 treatment-naïve patients who had been recently diagnosed with advanced NSCLC. Patients with brain metastasis were excluded. The patients were classified into anorectic and non-anorectic groups. Data from functional magnetic resonance imaging based on blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signals were analyzed while the patients perceived pleasant and unpleasant food pictures. The brain records were analyzed with SPM 5 using a voxelwise multiple regression analysis.ResultsThe non-anorexic patients demonstrated BOLD activation, comprising frontal brain regions in the premotor and the prefrontal cortices, only while watching unpleasant stimuli. The anorectic patients demonstrated no activation while watching the pleasant and unpleasant food pictures.ConclusionsAnorectic patients with lung cancer present a lack of activation in the brain regions associated with food stimuli processing. These results are consistent with experiences in the clinical environment: Patients describe themselves as not experiencing sensations of hunger or having an appetite.Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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