Abstract

Inhibitory control, the ability to suppress prepotent responses and resist irrelevant stimuli, is thought to play a critical role in the maintenance of obesity. However, electrophysiological performance related to different inhibitory control processes and their relationship with motor response inhibition and cognitive interference and potential biochemical mechanisms in middle-aged, obese women are as yet unclear. This work thus compared different neurocognitive Go/Nogo and Stroop task performance in healthy sedentary normal-weight and obese women, as well as their correlation with biochemical markers. Twenty-six healthy, sedentary obese women (obese group) and 26 age-matched (21–45 years old) normal-weight women (control group) were the participants, categorized by body mass index and percentage fat, as measured with dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. They provided a fasting blood sample and performed two cognitive tasks (i.e., Go/Nogo and Stroop tasks) with concomitant electrophysiological recording. The N2 and P3 waveforms of event-related potential (ERP) were recorded. Although the between-group behavioral performance was comparable, the obese group relative to the control group showed significantly longer N2 latency and smaller P3 amplitude in the Stroop task and smaller N2 and P3 amplitudes in the Go/Nogo task. Significant inflammation response indices (e.g., CRP, leptin, adiponectin/leptin ratio) were observed in the obese group. The Nogo P3 amplitude was significantly correlated with the adiponectin/leptin ratio. These findings indicate that healthy obese women still exhibit deviant neurophysiological performance when performing Go/Nogo and Stroop tasks, where the adiponectin/leptin ratio could be one of the influencing factors for the deficit in neural processes of motor response inhibition.

Highlights

  • Obesity has been associated with non-communicable diseases, but has been found to be related to reduced brain volume and impaired neurocognitive outcomes [1]

  • It is known that obesity is caused by multidimensional factors [2], evidence indicates a relationship between obesity and neural circuits related to cognitive control functions

  • The results indicated divergent behavioral and cognitive electrophysiological performance [e.g., higher reaction time (RT) variability and lower P3 amplitude in the Go/Nogo task and longer RTs in the Stroop task] between normal-weight and overweight/obese groups [16]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Obesity has been associated with non-communicable diseases, but has been found to be related to reduced brain volume (e.g., frontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex) and impaired neurocognitive outcomes (e.g., frontal-lobe-based executive functions) [1]. It is known that obesity is caused by multidimensional factors [2], evidence indicates a relationship between obesity and neural circuits related to cognitive control functions. A recent systematic review paper reported that inhibitory control is significantly impaired in obese adults and children compared to normal-weight, Int. J. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 2726; doi:10.3390/ijerph17082726 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call