Change occurs in weeks London - Arabstoday High-fat diets pile on weight around the midriff - but in mice at least, they also seem to cause 'growth' inside the brain. Sadly, a diet of cheeseburgers won't make you more intelligent - the new cells trigger weight gain. Mice with the new cells packed on weight far faster than other mice - even when both were on the same high-fat diet. The finding could offer an insight into how the brain controls weight gain through eating and hunger. It could even open new avenues into understanding the factors that trigger obesity. It's not clear whether the same process is at work in humans - but if so, the finding could also offer an avenue for anti-obesity treatments. 'This kind of work will definitely inform how we think about the underlying factors that relate to obesity,' said endocrinologist Jeffrey Flier of Harvard Medical School in Boston in an interview with Science Now. 'That is going to be a very interesting frontier.' The research found that a high-fat diet caused nerve cells to grow in a tiny part of the brain called the median eminence. Mice who ate a high-fat diet also gained large numbers of cells in the median eminence, creating up to four times as many as mice with a normal diet - and the change occurred in weeks. Mice with more of the cells gained more weight, thanks, the researchers think to a mysterious type of brain cell called a 'tancyte' - which is also found in humans. Lead researcher Seth Blackshaw of John Hopkins University said, 'This is the very first step in trying to understand this process. We're a long way from realising whether this is relevant to human obesity.'
GMT 12:06 2018 Thursday ,13 December
Blue light in smartphones linked to blindness and some cancersGMT 11:56 2018 Friday ,30 November
Congo Ebola outbreak becomes second-worst in history, IRC saysGMT 17:52 2018 Sunday ,25 November
Russian medical team provides services to citizen in Talbiseh town in HomsGMT 11:28 2018 Thursday ,15 November
Cameroon strives to curb maternal and infant mortality in restive Anglophone regionsGMT 15:36 2018 Tuesday ,30 October
China’s invitation to pool efforts in finding cure for cancer and AIDSGMT 17:19 2018 Monday ,22 October
New campaign launched in Cairo to raise awareness of migrainesGMT 13:36 2018 Friday ,19 October
Egypt elected as member in joint coordination council of WHO programmeGMT 11:51 2018 Wednesday ,17 October
Syria, ICRC sign two MoUs on treatment diabetes and LeishmaniasisMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor