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Fatty foods may cause cocaine-like addiction

By Sarah Klein, Health.com
March 28, 2010 2:42 p.m. EDT
Cheesecake and other fatty foods overload the pleasure centers in 
the brain.
Cheesecake and other fatty foods overload the pleasure centers in the brain.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Brains of rats that gorged themselves on human fatty foods changed
  • Dopamine appears to be responsible for the behavior of the overeating rats
  • Findings could lead to new treatments for obesity
RELATED TOPICS

(Health.com) -- Scientists have finally confirmed what the rest of us have suspected for years: Bacon, cheesecake, and other delicious yet fattening foods may be addictive.

A new study in rats suggests that high-fat, high-calorie foods affect the brain in much the same way as cocaine and heroin. When rats consume these foods in great enough quantities, it leads to compulsive eating habits that resemble drug addiction, the study found.

Doing drugs such as cocaine and eating too much junk food both gradually overload the so-called pleasure centers in the brain, according to Paul J. Kenny, Ph.D., an associate professor of molecular therapeutics at the Scripps Research Institute, in Jupiter, Florida. Eventually the pleasure centers "crash," and achieving the same pleasure--or even just feeling normal--requires increasing amounts of the drug or food, says Kenny, the lead author of the study.

"People know intuitively that there's more to [overeating] than just willpower," he says. "There's a system in the brain that's been turned on or over-activated, and that's driving [overeating] at some subconscious level."

In the study, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, Kenny and his co-author studied three groups of lab rats for 40 days. One of the groups was fed regular rat food. A second was fed bacon, sausage, cheesecake, frosting, and other fattening, high-calorie foods--but only for one hour each day. The third group was allowed to pig out on the unhealthy foods for up to 23 hours a day.

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Not surprisingly, the rats that gorged themselves on the human food quickly became obese. But their brains also changed. By monitoring implanted brain electrodes, the researchers found that the rats in the third group gradually developed a tolerance to the pleasure the food gave them and had to eat more to experience a high.

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They began to eat compulsively, to the point where they continued to do so in the face of pain. When the researchers applied an electric shock to the rats' feet in the presence of the food, the rats in the first two groups were frightened away from eating. But the obese rats were not. "Their attention was solely focused on consuming food," says Kenny.

In previous studies, rats have exhibited similar brain changes when given unlimited access to cocaine or heroin. And rats have similarly ignored punishment to continue consuming cocaine, the researchers note.

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The fact that junk food could provoke this response isn't entirely surprising, says Dr.Gene-Jack Wang, M.D., the chair of the medical department at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, in Upton, New York.

"We make our food very similar to cocaine now," he says.

Coca leaves have been used since ancient times, he points out, but people learned to purify or alter cocaine to deliver it more efficiently to their brains (by injecting or smoking it, for instance). This made the drug more addictive.

According to Wang, food has evolved in a similar way. "We purify our food," he says. "Our ancestors ate whole grains, but we're eating white bread. American Indians ate corn; we eat corn syrup."

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The ingredients in purified modern food cause people to "eat unconsciously and unnecessarily," and will also prompt an animal to "eat like a drug abuser [uses drugs]," says Wang.

The neurotransmitter dopamine appears to be responsible for the behavior of the overeating rats, according to the study. Dopamine is involved in the brain's pleasure (or reward) centers, and it also plays a role in reinforcing behavior. "It tells the brain something has happened and you should learn from what just happened," says Kenny.

Overeating caused the levels of a certain dopamine receptor in the brains of the obese rats to drop, the study found. In humans, low levels of the same receptors have been associated with drug addiction and obesity, and may be genetic, Kenny says.

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However, that doesn't mean that everyone born with lower dopamine receptor levels is destined to become an addict or to overeat. As Wang points out, environmental factors, and not just genes, are involved in both behaviors.

Wang also cautions that applying the results of animal studies to humans can be tricky. For instance, he says, in studies of weight-loss drugs, rats have lost as much as 30 percent of their weight, but humans on the same drug have lost less than 5 percent of their weight. "You can't mimic completely human behavior, but [animal studies] can give you a clue about what can happen in humans," Wang says.

Although he acknowledges that his research may not directly translate to humans, Kenny says the findings shed light on the brain mechanisms that drive overeating and could even lead to new treatments for obesity.

"If we could develop therapeutics for drug addiction, those same drugs may be good for obesity as well," he says.

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Copyright Health Magazine 2010

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  • blondx
    what a joke, its not the fat that is causing the serious health issues, Its the KIND of Fat and additives Like HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP which is where the addiction comes in, High Fructose corn syrup has been used in everything as it is cheeper than sugar, It is a 6 sided molecule not 5 like sugar. ...more
  • 2tiredofthis
    I read somewhere on CNN that being poor and lazy is a disease.
  • pimp1
    What is with this health crap? So what if someone is as big as a whale and kicks the bucket early that is their choice.
  • Guest
    yea but it should be our choice to decide whether we want to pay for his health care
  • Guest
    Yet another example of people not accepting the responsibility of their own actions. Call it addictive if you want, instead try exercising a little self-discipline and pushing away from the table. There's a concept! But of course it's natures fault when there's pile-up on the freeway during a sno ...more
  • qtipper
    This seems like pretty bad reporting and perhaps bad science as well. It is assuming what "junk food" is based on Conventional Wisdom without consistent criteria. The study combined both high fat and high carbohydrate foods for the rats... high carb foods have long been shown to create addiction lik ...more
  • hfhmilkman
    This is great science. It shows that brain chemistry changes in the presense of a high fat/calorie diet. It makes sense that our bodies are wired that way as starvation was probably the biggest killer for much of our species existance. Where rats have an advantage over us is they have more brown ...more
  • tgmee
    Duh
  • evilchicken7
    I just snorted an entire chili chicken gordita...do I have a problem?
  • PublicAnimal
    Junk science at its best!
  • cyndijoy
    Well, I wonder how much money was spent in funding THIS particular study. And for some of you know-it-all's...it's not easy for everyone to "just make a healthier choice". You can't generalize...there's genuine eating disorders out there. Sure, there are people who are lazy and undisciplined about t ...more
  • Mizmouse
    Thank you for your comment cyndijoy. I am studying Nutrition Science at a top research university right now, and I am also offended when people without knowledge of nutrition and physiology make "pop diagnoses", as you put it. The human body, and in particular, the brain, is extremely complex. Th ...more
  • MarieLouiseB
    And they had to torture animals to get these findings.
  • pimp1
    So
  • PinkSparkles
    test on death row inmates and pedophiles. Like they said, Mice don't always react to drugs the same way we do.
  • EE4Life
    Rather test rats then test humans.
  • cbd135
    well i guess they are half right and half wrong
    everybody has different beliefs lol
  • QuestionThis
    I can completely see this - if I order french fries one night, I find myself craving them for the next few days. Interesting, but not an excuse!
  • coll13
    I am not surprised by this research and it is extremely important for our society to realize that junk food is harmful. I work with toddlers and preschoolers with excessively restricted diets who would rather starve themselves than to try anything but chicken nuggets and french fries. I have said fo ...more
  • Sul5
    Sorry,I don't buy the idea that fatty foods are addictive.I think America has fallen into the who or what can I BLAME for MY LACK OF DISCIPLINE!!!
  • Feeniegal
    Yup..no brainer.
  • lololol
    I live in Canada and am surprised every time i go to the states. If I go to McDonalds over there and order a small pop it is bigger than our large. Every time I have gone south for vacation with friends or family we only order one meal in restaurants for two people because the portions are so big an ...more
  • doyoureally
    Not to beat a dead horse haha! BUT I looked up Mcdonald's serving sizes in Canada and the US. A large coke in Canada has 320 calories, a large coke in the US has 310 calories. I think I've made my point and am done now! I love both of my country's but I do get tired of the Canadian high and mighty a ...more
  • doyoureally
    Ok, I had to look up obesity rates. The most recent rates for Canada I could find were from 2004 and stated 23% of Canadians are obese. In 2010 34% of Americans are obese. I bet Canada's current rate is higher than 23% now so really not very far behind.
  • doyoureally
    hmmm, I call BS I am Canadian living in the US. Drink and food serving sizes are not very different. Canadian obesity rates are steadily climbing as well. My mom recently moved back to Edmonton and comments all the time about how fat people are.

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