Neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa
In Anorexia Nervosa the observable phenomenon is the suppression of appetite. Little is known about the biological and psychological (top-down) bases that maintain this pathological state. However, Anorexia Nervosa is a biological, psychological and social model where the main behavioral characteris...
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Universidad de San Buenaventura
2012
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oai:doaj.org-article:58a8b450bb6d4359bc5a31959ea6e2af2021-11-25T02:23:06ZNeurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa10.21500/20112084.7402011-20842011-7922https://doaj.org/article/58a8b450bb6d4359bc5a31959ea6e2af2012-12-01T00:00:00Zhttps://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/740https://doaj.org/toc/2011-2084https://doaj.org/toc/2011-7922In Anorexia Nervosa the observable phenomenon is the suppression of appetite. Little is known about the biological and psychological (top-down) bases that maintain this pathological state. However, Anorexia Nervosa is a biological, psychological and social model where the main behavioral characteristic is the inhibition of eating behavior; not by bottom-up but top-down regulation. Objective: To explore the areas of the brain associated with food appetency through functional magnetic resonance in women with anorexia nervosa. Methods: The subjects include 5 female with Restrictive type of Anorexia Nervosa and five controls female with similar in age and low weigh. The subjects were within the MRI scanner and while took fMRI they saw food images that would generate appetite. The subjects were in fasting state and mentally prepare by instruction “imagine you are eating the food presented in the following images”. Results: Compared differences in the activation between subjects four regions were found significant: the anterior cingulate, left front medial region and the left and right midbrain. Conclusions: The patients with Anorexia Nervosa present different activated cerebral areas to those of the controls during the visual exposition to food in hungry state and with evoke cognitions associated with eat food; those regions may be implicated in reward and self-control.Juán José Cervantes-NavarreteSarael Alcauter-SolórzanoCarlos Miguel-BuenoJorge Julio Gonzalez-OlveraRoger Carrillo-MezoMaria de Lourdes Martínez-GudiñoAlejandro de Jesús Caballero-RomoUniversidad de San BuenaventuraarticleAnorexia Nervosafood appetencyappetiteneuroimagingPsychologyBF1-990ENESInternational Journal of Psychological Research, Vol 5, Iss 2 (2012) |
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Anorexia Nervosa food appetency appetite neuroimaging Psychology BF1-990 |
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Anorexia Nervosa food appetency appetite neuroimaging Psychology BF1-990 Juán José Cervantes-Navarrete Sarael Alcauter-Solórzano Carlos Miguel-Bueno Jorge Julio Gonzalez-Olvera Roger Carrillo-Mezo Maria de Lourdes Martínez-Gudiño Alejandro de Jesús Caballero-Romo Neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa |
description |
In Anorexia Nervosa the observable phenomenon is the suppression of appetite. Little is known about the biological and psychological (top-down) bases that maintain this pathological state. However, Anorexia Nervosa is a biological, psychological and social model where the main behavioral characteristic is the inhibition of eating behavior; not by bottom-up but top-down regulation. Objective: To explore the areas of the brain associated with food appetency through functional magnetic resonance in women with anorexia nervosa. Methods: The subjects include 5 female with Restrictive type of Anorexia Nervosa and five controls female with similar in age and low weigh. The subjects were within the MRI scanner and while took fMRI they saw food images that would generate appetite. The subjects were in fasting state and mentally prepare by instruction “imagine you are eating the food presented in the following images”. Results: Compared differences in the activation between subjects four regions were found significant: the anterior cingulate, left front medial region and the left and right midbrain. Conclusions: The patients with Anorexia Nervosa present different activated cerebral areas to those of the controls during the visual exposition to food in hungry state and with evoke cognitions associated with eat food; those regions may be implicated in reward and self-control. |
format |
article |
author |
Juán José Cervantes-Navarrete Sarael Alcauter-Solórzano Carlos Miguel-Bueno Jorge Julio Gonzalez-Olvera Roger Carrillo-Mezo Maria de Lourdes Martínez-Gudiño Alejandro de Jesús Caballero-Romo |
author_facet |
Juán José Cervantes-Navarrete Sarael Alcauter-Solórzano Carlos Miguel-Bueno Jorge Julio Gonzalez-Olvera Roger Carrillo-Mezo Maria de Lourdes Martínez-Gudiño Alejandro de Jesús Caballero-Romo |
author_sort |
Juán José Cervantes-Navarrete |
title |
Neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa |
title_short |
Neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa |
title_full |
Neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa |
title_fullStr |
Neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa |
title_full_unstemmed |
Neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa |
title_sort |
neurofunctional areas related to food appetency in anorexia nervosa |
publisher |
Universidad de San Buenaventura |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/58a8b450bb6d4359bc5a31959ea6e2af |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT juanjosecervantesnavarrete neurofunctionalareasrelatedtofoodappetencyinanorexianervosa AT saraelalcautersolorzano neurofunctionalareasrelatedtofoodappetencyinanorexianervosa AT carlosmiguelbueno neurofunctionalareasrelatedtofoodappetencyinanorexianervosa AT jorgejuliogonzalezolvera neurofunctionalareasrelatedtofoodappetencyinanorexianervosa AT rogercarrillomezo neurofunctionalareasrelatedtofoodappetencyinanorexianervosa AT mariadelourdesmartinezgudino neurofunctionalareasrelatedtofoodappetencyinanorexianervosa AT alejandrodejesuscaballeroromo neurofunctionalareasrelatedtofoodappetencyinanorexianervosa |
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