Warning: "Avoid looking at pictures of appetising food as it will make you hungry!" Dieticians could be making recommendations along these lines in the future. It has long been known that, in addition to the physiological regulatory circuits for the maintenance of a sufficient energy status for the body, external stimuli like smell or the sight of food also influence our feelings of hunger and our resulting eating behaviour. The danger that the exposure to such images will result in the consumption of food that is not needed to maintain the body's energy status is particularly high in our advertising-dominated society.
In a study involving healthy male subjects, Axel Steiger and his research group at the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry investigated the molecular processes for the control of food consumption. They examined the specific physiological reaction of the test subjects to images showing either delicious food or non-edible objects. The concentrations of different hormones in the blood such as grehlin, leptin and insulin, which play a role in the regulation of food consumption, were measured. The researchers actually observed that the concentration of grehlin in the blood increases specifically in response to visual stimulation with food images.
"The findings of our study demonstrate, for the first time, that the release
of ghrelin into the blood for the regulation of food consumption is also
controlled by external factors. Our brain thereby processes these visual
stimuli, and the physical processes that control our perception of appetite are
triggered involuntarily. This mechanism could prompt us to eat a piece of cake
just two hours after breakfast," says Petra Schüssler, a scientist at the Max
Planck Institute. She thus recommends that individuals with weight problems
should preferably avoid looking at images of appetising food.
More information: Schüssler P, Kluge M, Yassouridis A, Dresler M, Uhr
M, Steiger A. Ghrelin levels increase after pictures showing food Obesity
(Silver Spring). 12 January 2012, doi:
10.1038/oby.2011.385 . [Epub ahead of print]Provided by Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
"External stimuli control the hormonal regulation of our eating behavior." January 19th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-01-external-stimuli-hormonal-behavior.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek
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