Overweight child?s brain reacts differently to food, study finds
Posted 4:47 PM, October 24, 2016, by Hana Kim, Updated at 10:10pm, October 24, 2016
SEATTLE - Fascinating is one way to describe the science going on at Seattle Children?s Research Institute. Dr. Christian Roth and his team are studying the relationship between brain signals and food consumption in children.
?We want to test the brain responses to food,? he said.
Dr. Roth is studying the part of the brain associated with things like food intake, impulsivity, and addiction.
?The hormonal pattern is completely different in overweight children versus lean children,? Dr. Roth said. And that difference can be seen in recent MRI scans showing a lean child and an overweight one...
...
So the question is how does an overweight child's brain get this way?
?If you eat a lot of unhealthy foods your responses for food intake is different than if you eat healthy foods,? Dr. Roth explains.
He says it?s rarely genetics, it's more of a biological and environmental reaction...
Posted 4:47 PM, October 24, 2016, by Hana Kim, Updated at 10:10pm, October 24, 2016
SEATTLE - Fascinating is one way to describe the science going on at Seattle Children?s Research Institute. Dr. Christian Roth and his team are studying the relationship between brain signals and food consumption in children.
?We want to test the brain responses to food,? he said.
Dr. Roth is studying the part of the brain associated with things like food intake, impulsivity, and addiction.
?The hormonal pattern is completely different in overweight children versus lean children,? Dr. Roth said. And that difference can be seen in recent MRI scans showing a lean child and an overweight one...
...
So the question is how does an overweight child's brain get this way?
?If you eat a lot of unhealthy foods your responses for food intake is different than if you eat healthy foods,? Dr. Roth explains.
He says it?s rarely genetics, it's more of a biological and environmental reaction...