Endogenous Opioids in the Homeostatic Regulation of Hunger, Satiety, and Hedonic Eating: Neurobiological Foundations.

Q3 Neuroscience Advances in neurobiology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1007/978-3-031-45493-6_16
Marcela Rodriguez Flores, Sylvana Stephano Zúñiga
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Abstract

This chapter (part one of a trilogy) summarizes the neurobiological foundations of endogenous opioids in the regulation of energy balance and eating behavior, dysregulation of which translates to maladaptive dietary responses in individuals with obesity and eating disorders, including anorexia, bulimia, and binge eating disorder. Knowledge of these neurobiological foundations is vital to researchers' and clinicians' understanding of pathophysiology as well as the science-based development of multidisciplinary diagnoses and treatments for obesity and eating disorders. We highlight mechanisms of endogenous opioids in both homeostatic and hedonic feeding behavior, review research on the dysregulation of food reward that plays a role in a wide array of obesity and disordered eating, and the clinical implications of neurobiological responses to food for current science-based treatments for obesity and eating disorders.

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内源性阿片类物质在饥饿、饱腹感和享乐性进食的体内平衡调节中的作用:神经生物学基础。
本章(三部曲之一)总结了内源性阿片类物质在调节能量平衡和进食行为方面的神经生物学基础,调节失调会转化为肥胖症和进食障碍(包括厌食症、贪食症和暴饮暴食症)患者的不良饮食反应。了解这些神经生物学基础对于研究人员和临床医生理解病理生理学以及以科学为基础制定肥胖和进食障碍的多学科诊断和治疗方法至关重要。我们将重点介绍内源性阿片类物质在平衡性和享乐性进食行为中的作用机制,回顾食物奖赏失调在各种肥胖症和进食障碍中的作用研究,以及对食物的神经生物学反应对当前基于科学的肥胖症和进食障碍治疗方法的临床意义。
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来源期刊
Advances in neurobiology
Advances in neurobiology Neuroscience-Neurology
CiteScore
2.80
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