Tuesday, February 25, 2025
spot_img

How walnuts can help control appetite

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

New York:  Consuming walnuts activates an area in the brain associated with regulating hunger and craving for food, says a new study.

The findings, published online in the journal Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, shed light on how walnuts discourage overeating by promoting feelings of fullness.

“We don’t often think about how what we eat impacts the activity in our brain,” said the study’s first author Olivia Farr from the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre (BIDMC) in Boston in the US.

“We know people report feeling fuller after eating walnuts, but it was pretty surprising to see evidence of activity changing in the brain related to food cues, and by extension what people were eating and how hungry they feel,” Farr said.

To determine exactly how walnuts quell craving for food, Farr and colleagues used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to observe how consuming walnuts changes activity in the brain.

The scientists recruited a small group of volunteers with obesity to live in BIDMC’s Clinical Research Centre (CRC) for two five-day sessions.

During one session, volunteers consumed daily smoothies containing 48 grams of walnuts.

During their other stay. they received a walnut-free but nutritionally comparable placebo smoothie, flavoured to taste exactly the same as the walnut-containing smoothie.

As in previous observational studies, participants reported feeling less hungry during the week they consumed walnut-containing smoothies than during the week they were given the placebo smoothies.

Functional MRI tests administered on the fifth day of the experiment gave the team a clear picture as to why.

While in the machine, study participants were shown images of desirable foods like hamburgers and desserts, neutral objects like flowers and rocks and less desirable foods like vegetables.

When participants were shown pictures of highly desirable foods, fMRI imaging revealed increased activity in a part of the brain called the right insula after participants had consumed the five-day walnut-rich diet compared to when they had not.

“This is a powerful measure,” said Christos Mantzoros, Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

“When participants eat walnuts, this part of their brain lights up, and we know that’s connected with what they are telling us about feeling less hungry or more full,” Mantzoros said.

This area of the insula is likely involved in cognitive control and salience, meaning that participants were paying more attention to food choices and selecting the less desirable or healthier options over the highly desirable or less healthy options. (IANS)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Rs 2,000 crore revenue loss due to Delhi’s liquor policy: CAG report puts AAP in dock

New Delhi, Feb 25: The Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) report, tabled in the Delhi Assembly on Tuesday,...

Congress leader Sajjan Kumar sentenced to life imprisonment in 1984 anti-Sikh riots case

New Delhi, Feb 25: A trial court on Tuesday sentenced former Congress MP Sajjan Kumar to life imprisonment...

Ties with European allies frayed, US gets Ukraine resolution passed by UNSC after failure at UNGA

United Nations, Feb 25:  In a sign of its relations with Western allies fraying, the US managed to...

Today, the world trusts India’s governance which is constantly reforming: PM Modi

Guwahati, Feb 25: Prime Minister Narendra Modi, while addressing the Advantage Assam Summit in Guwahati on Tuesday, highlighted...