Abstract

BackgroundPeople with overweight have stronger reactivity (e.g., subjective craving) to food cues than lean people, and this reactivity is positively associated with food intake. Cue reactivity is a learned response that can be reduced with food cue exposure therapy.ObjectivesIt was hypothesized that participants after food cue exposure therapy would show reduced neural activity in brain regions related to food cue reactivity and increased neural activity in brain regions related to inhibitory-control as compared to participants receiving a control lifestyle intervention.MethodNeural activity of 10 women with overweight (BMI ≥ 27 kg/m2) in response to individually tailored visually presented palatable high-caloric food stimuli was examined before vs. after a cue exposure intervention (n = 5) or a control lifestyle (n = 5) intervention. Data were analyzed case-by-case.ResultsNeural responses to food stimuli were reduced in food-cue-reactivity-related brain regions after the lifestyle intervention in most participants, and generally not after the cue exposure therapy. Moreover, cue exposure did not lead to increased activity in inhibitory-control-related brain regions. However, decreased neural activity after cue exposure was found in most participants in the lateral occipital complex (LOC), which suggests a decreased visual salience of high-caloric food stimuli.ConclusionReceiving a cue exposure therapy did not lead to expected neural responses. As cue exposure relies on inhibitory learning mechanisms, differences in contexts (e.g., environments and food types) between the intervention setting and the scanning sessions may explain the general lack of effect of cue-exposure on neural activity.

Highlights

  • The prevalence of obesity has reached pandemic proportions (World Health Organization, 2018)

  • To overcome the problem of high heterogeneity in neural responses due to individual differences that could occur in small sample sizes (Roiser et al, 2016), data were analyzed on subject-level, as separate cases

  • The time between first and second scan session ranged for cue exposure therapy (CE): 34–43 days and for LS: 36–58 days

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Summary

Introduction

The prevalence of obesity has reached pandemic proportions (World Health Organization, 2018). As compared to lean people, overweight people have a stronger food cue reactivity (Ferriday and Brunstrom, 2011), which is related to increased food intake (Boswell and Kober, 2016). In CE, overweight people are repeatedly exposed to food cues while (over)eating is prevented (Bouton, 2004, 2011; Jansen et al, 2011, 2016; van den Akker et al, 2014). Cue reactivity is a learned response that can be reduced with food cue exposure therapy

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