Obesity drug improves this cognitive function in obese people

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Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research explored the effect of obesity on associative learning, which is vital for forming neural connections and influencing behavior.

The study particularly focused on the dopaminergic midbrain, a region rich in receptors for signaling molecules like insulin.

The results showed that low insulin sensitivity in obesity impairs the brain’s ability to associate sensory stimuli and changes brain activity in areas responsible for this learning.

What Did the Study Do?

The study involved 30 volunteers with high insulin sensitivity (normal weight) and 24 volunteers with low insulin sensitivity (obesity).

Participants were administered either liraglutide, a GLP-1 agonist drug used for obesity and type 2 diabetes treatment, or a placebo.

The next morning, they were subjected to a learning task designed to measure associative learning ability.

Major Outcomes:

Participants with obesity displayed less capability to associate sensory stimuli compared to those of normal weight.

Brain activity in areas governing associative learning was reduced in participants with obesity.

A single dose of liraglutide normalized these impairments, aligning the brain activity of obese participants with that of normal-weight subjects.

Implications:

Behavioral Basis: The study indicates that basic behaviors, such as associative learning, are affected by the body’s metabolic state, apart from external environmental conditions.

Drug Intervention: The normalization of brain activity through liraglutide implies that existing medications can positively influence brain activity in the context of obesity.

Prevention Over Medication: The findings also emphasize that obesity prevention should take a more prominent role, as lifelong medication is less preferred to primary prevention.

Holistic Health Impact: Obesity’s impact on brain function underlines the need to consider the neurological as well as metabolic aspects of this condition.

Future Considerations:

These findings may open the door for further research on how metabolic states like obesity affect various cognitive functions and behavioral aspects.

They also call for greater attention to preventive measures in healthcare policy, given that even young people without other medical conditions exhibit changes in brain function due to obesity.

Overall, the study is groundbreaking in its identification of the intricate relationship between metabolic states, brain function, and behavior, adding another layer to our understanding of the multifaceted consequences of obesity.

If you care about weight loss, please read studies that hop extract could reduce belly fat in overweight people, and early time-restricted eating could help lose weight.

For more information about obesity, please see recent studies about low-carb keto diet could manage obesity effectively and results showing popular weight loss diet linked to heart disease and cancer.

The study was published in Nature Metabolism.

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