Friday, January 6, 2012

Online Health Expert Medical News Flash: Study Shows that Obesity Induced Brain Changes May be The Reason Why Weight Control is So Hard.

Online Health Expert Medical News Report: Weight Control in Obese Individuals Linked to Brain Changes due to Obesity.

Previously, an Australian study had shown that Rebound weight gain after dieting results from a homeostatic interplay of changes in weight regulating hormones.

Now, a new study reported in the Journal of Clinical Investigation Dr. Michael W. Schwartz, professor of medicine at the University of Washington are reporting how rodents and humans with diet-induced obesity have structural changes in their hypothalamus, an area in the brain, which controls body weight among many other functions. Body weight is regulated by a rather complex set of interactions between hormones and brain cells (neurons). There is a growing belief among researchers that these interactions, in most obese people, "conspire" to prevent long-term weight loss, and the underlying mechanisms are increasingly investigated by neuroendocrinologists.

Dr. Schwartz told the press:

"To explain a biologically elevated body weight 'set-point', investigators in the field have speculated about the existence of fundamental changes to brain neurocircuits that control energy balance. Our findings are the first to offer direct evidence of such a structural change, and they include evidence in humans as well as in mice and rats."

In a second study published in the same issue of the journal, another team of researchers, led by Dr. Jeffrey Flier, of  Harvard Medical School, Boston,  reported that turnover of nerve cells in the hypothalamus of mice is inhibited by obesity, adding further weight to the argument that physiology, rather than lapsing back to old eating habits, could be the reason for weight regain following a period of successful weight loss in obese people.


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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Online Health Expert Medical News Flash: Analysis of 14 Studies Involving Children Between Ages of 6 and 18 Found Strong and Positive Relationship Between Physical Activity and Academic Performance.

Online Health Expert Medical News Report: A review of 14 studies published in the January, 2012  issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine involving children between Ages of six and eighteen found Strong and Positive Relationship between Physical Activity and Academic Performance.


The researchers noted that the increased oxygen and blood flow to the brain that accompanies exercise might be the reason behind their improved classroom performance.


Further Reading and Sources:


Link 1


Link 2  


Thank you for updating your medical knowledge at Online Health Expert. 


Sincerely, 


Dr. Harish Malik

Online Health Expert Medical News Flash: Consuming Excess Calories May Lead to Fat Gain Irrespective of Their Source.

Online Health Expert Medical News Report: In a study published in the Jan. 4, 2012 issue of JAMA (Journal of American Medical Association), involving 25 healthy participants which were divided into 3 groups getting a low-protein, high-protein, and a normal-protein diet with equal calories (all of them received extra 1000 calories), the researchers found that the total calorie intake, regardless of the nutritional source of calories, determines the amount of fat accumulation in their bodies.  


These findings suggest that the current Obesity epidemic may be worse than is currently understood as those with lower body weight may have undetected layers of fat that can harm their health.


Further Reading and Sources:


Link 1

Link 2


Thank you for updating your medical knowledge at Online Health Expert


Sincerely,


Dr. Harish Malik