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Exploring the acute effects of running on cerebral blood flow and food cue reactivity in healthy young men using functional magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors :
Thackray, Alice E.
Hinton, Elanor C.
Alanazi, Turki M.
Dera, Abdulrahman M.
Kyoko Fujihara
Hamilton-Shield, Julian P.
King, James A.
Lithander, Fiona E.
Masashi Miyashita
Thompson, Julie
Morgan, Paul S.
Davies, Melanie J.
Stensel, David J.
Source :
Human Brain Mapping; 6/15/2023, Vol. 44 Issue 9, p3815-3832, 18p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Acute exercise suppresses appetite and alters food-cue reactivity, but the extent exercise-induced changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF) influences the blood-oxygenlevel- dependent (BOLD) signal during appetite-related paradigms is not known. This study examined the impact of acute running on visual food-cue reactivity and explored whether such responses are influenced by CBF variability. In a randomised crossover design, 23 men (mean ± SD: 24 ± 4 years, 22.9 ± 2.1 kg/m2) completed fMRI scans before and after 60 min of running (68% ± 3% peak oxygen uptake) or rest (control). Five-minute pseudo-continuous arterial spin labelling fMRI scans were conducted for CBF assessment before and at four consecutive repeat acquisitions after exercise/rest. BOLD-fMRI was acquired during a food-cue reactivity task before and 28 min after exercise/rest. Food-cue reactivity analysis was performed with and without CBF adjustment. Subjective appetite ratings were assessed before, during and after exercise/rest. Exercise CBF was higher in grey matter, the posterior insula and in the region of the amygdala/hippocampus, and lower in the medial orbitofrontal cortex and dorsal striatum than control (main effect trial p ≤ .018). No time-by-trial interactions for CBF were identified (p ≥ .087). Exercise induced moderate-to-large reductions in subjective appetite ratings (Cohen's d = 0.53--0.84; p ≤ .024) and increased food-cue reactivity in the paracingulate gyrus, hippocampus, precuneous cortex, frontal pole and posterior cingulate gyrus. Accounting for CBF variability did not markedly alter detection of exercise-induced BOLD signal changes. Acute running evoked overall changes in CBF that were not time dependent and increased food-cue reactivity in regions implicated in attention, anticipation of reward, and episodic memory independent of CBF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10659471
Volume :
44
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Human Brain Mapping
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164570124
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26314