Male-female health differences: MRI brain analysis reveals sex-based differences in weight gain

Male-female differences: MRI analysis of the brains of overweight women indicates they are more susceptible to future weight gain
Credit: Pixabay/ Mitrey

MRIs revealed gender-based differences in both the structure and function of the brains of overweight and obese people. For example, researchers found evidence in the brains of overweight women indicating they are more susceptible than men to cravings for highly processed food and are at a higher risk of food addiction.

“We believe this has huge implications for treatment. We have to consider emotion regulation techniques, mood and vulnerability factors for women, which may not be as pertinent variables to highlight when implementing obesity-interventions for men,” researcher Arpana Gupta, PhD, said on Twitter. Gupta is a brain, obesity, and microbiome scientist at UCLA.

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Researchers used three different kinds of MRIs to evaluate the structure and functioning of participants’ brains. That information was then used to create a system that could look at MRI data from a single person and successfully predict obesity status or gender.

The resulting model was successful at least 75% of the time. This indicated to researchers that there are meaningful gender-based differences in overweight and obese people’s brains.

A history of mental health problems or childhood trauma was also linked to differences uncovered by the MRIs that influenced people’s relationship with food.

This is an excerpt. Read the full article here

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