Yo-yo dieting may drive compulsive eating

In a new study, researchers found the chronic cyclic pattern of overeating followed by undereating could reduce the brain’s ability to feel reward and may drive compulsive eating.

This finding suggests that the treatment of compulsive eating behavior should focus on rebalancing the mesolimbic dopamine system—the part of the brain responsible for feeling reward or pleasure.

The research was done by a team at Boston University School of Medicine.

An estimated 15 million people compulsively eat in the U.S. It is a common feature of obesity and eating disorders, most notably, binge eating disorder.

People often overeat because it is pleasurable in the short term, but then attempts to compensate by dieting, reducing calorie intake and limiting themselves to “safe”, less palatable food.

However, diets often fail, causing frequent “relapse” to overeat foods high in fat and sugar (palatable foods).

Scientists are just now beginning to understand the addictive-like properties of food and how repeated overconsumption of high sugar—similar to taking drugs—may affect our brains and cause compulsive behaviors

In order to better understand compulsive and uncontrollable eating, the team performed a series of experiments on two experimental models: one group received a high sugar chocolate-flavored diet for two days each week and a standard control diet the remaining days of the week (cycled group), while the other group, received the control diet all of the time (control group).

The group that cycled between the palatable food and the less palatable, spontaneously developed compulsive, binge eating on the sweet food and refused to eat regular food.

Both groups were then injected with a psychostimulant amphetamine, a drug that releases dopamine and produces a reward, and their behavior in a battery of behavioral tests was then observed.

While the control group predictably became very hyperactive after receiving amphetamine, the cycled group did not.

Furthermore, in a test of the conditioning properties of amphetamine, the control group was attracted to environments where they previously received amphetamine, whereas the cycled group was not.

Finally, when measuring the effects of amphetamine while directly stimulating the brain reward circuit, the control group was responsive to amphetamine, while the cycled group was not.

The researchers determined that the cycled group had less dopamine overall, released less dopamine in response to amphetamine and had dysfunctional dopamine transporters (the protein that carries dopamine back into brain cells) due to deficits in their mesolimbic dopamine system.

The team says compulsive eating may derive from the reduced ability to feel the reward.

These findings also provide support to the theory that compulsive eating has similarities to drug addiction.

The researchers hope these findings spark new avenues of research into compulsive eating that will lead to more effective treatments for obesity and eating disorders.

The lead author of the study is Pietro Cottone, Ph.D., associate professor of pharmacology & experimental therapeutics.

The study is published in Neuropsychopharmacology.

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