Summary: In mammals, changes in weight elicit responses that favor a return to one’s previous weight and promote weight stability. It has been hypothesized that palatable sweet and high-fat foods disturb the defense of body weight, leading to weight gain. We find that increasing sweetness or percent calories from fat increases diet palatability but that only increases in nutritive fat content increase caloric intake and body weight. In a mouse model of overfeeding that activates weight defense, high-fat diets, but not sweetened diets, attenuate the defense of body weight, leading to weight gain. The ability of a palatable, high-fat diet to increase food intake does not require tasting or smelling the food. Instead, the direct infusion of a ...
Purpose: Chronic exposure to stress may represent a risk factor for developing metabolic and eating ...
<div><p>Diet-induced obesity (DIO) resulting from consumption of a high fat diet (HFD) attenuates no...
Hyperphagic obesity is characterized in part by a specific increase in meal size that contributes to...
Body weight in mammals is defended so that small changes in weight evoke neuroendocrine and metaboli...
International audienceA relationship between orosensory detection of dietary lipids, regulation of f...
During digestion, macronutrients are sensed within the small intestine. This sensory process is depe...
Non-technical summary Obesity is known to result from energy intake in excess of expenditure. What ...
Obesity is an important health problem with a strong environmental component that is acquiring pande...
Eating depends strongly on learning processes which, in turn, depend on motivation. Conditioned lear...
The homeostatic regulation of food intake is one of the most pressing challenges to an organism. Cer...
<p><b>A.</b> Body weight of the HF fed mice differed significantly from those of the LF fed mice fro...
Increased dietary palatability may lead to excess food consumption which in turn causes an excess of...
Objective—Relapsing to overeating is a stubborn problem in obesity treatment. We tested the hypothes...
Objective:Palatable food disrupts normal appetite regulation, which may contribute to the etiology o...
Objective: Palatable food disrupts normal appetite regulation, which may contribute to the etiology ...
Purpose: Chronic exposure to stress may represent a risk factor for developing metabolic and eating ...
<div><p>Diet-induced obesity (DIO) resulting from consumption of a high fat diet (HFD) attenuates no...
Hyperphagic obesity is characterized in part by a specific increase in meal size that contributes to...
Body weight in mammals is defended so that small changes in weight evoke neuroendocrine and metaboli...
International audienceA relationship between orosensory detection of dietary lipids, regulation of f...
During digestion, macronutrients are sensed within the small intestine. This sensory process is depe...
Non-technical summary Obesity is known to result from energy intake in excess of expenditure. What ...
Obesity is an important health problem with a strong environmental component that is acquiring pande...
Eating depends strongly on learning processes which, in turn, depend on motivation. Conditioned lear...
The homeostatic regulation of food intake is one of the most pressing challenges to an organism. Cer...
<p><b>A.</b> Body weight of the HF fed mice differed significantly from those of the LF fed mice fro...
Increased dietary palatability may lead to excess food consumption which in turn causes an excess of...
Objective—Relapsing to overeating is a stubborn problem in obesity treatment. We tested the hypothes...
Objective:Palatable food disrupts normal appetite regulation, which may contribute to the etiology o...
Objective: Palatable food disrupts normal appetite regulation, which may contribute to the etiology ...
Purpose: Chronic exposure to stress may represent a risk factor for developing metabolic and eating ...
<div><p>Diet-induced obesity (DIO) resulting from consumption of a high fat diet (HFD) attenuates no...
Hyperphagic obesity is characterized in part by a specific increase in meal size that contributes to...