Exposure to a hypercaloric diet produces long lasting changes in motivation

Changes in motivation have been observed following induction of diet-induced obesity. However, to date, results have been contradictory, some authors reporting an increase in motivation to obtain palatable food, but others observing a decrease. Observed differences might be associated with the lengt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioural processes 2022-10, Vol.202, p.104737-104737, Article 104737
Hauptverfasser: Zepeda-Ruiz, Wendy Andrea, Abonza-Páez, Héctor Alan, Cerbón, Marco, Velazquez Martinez, David N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Changes in motivation have been observed following induction of diet-induced obesity. However, to date, results have been contradictory, some authors reporting an increase in motivation to obtain palatable food, but others observing a decrease. Observed differences might be associated with the length of both the evaluation period and exposure to the diet. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate changes in motivation during 20 weeks of exposure to a hypercaloric diet. Performance of the subjects in a progressive ratio schedule was evaluated before and during the exposure to a high-fat, high-sugar choice diet (HFHSc). A decrease in motivation was observed after 2 weeks of diet exposure, low levels of motivation remained throughout 20 weeks. A comparable decrease in motivation took longer (3 weeks) to develop using chow diet in the control group. Overall, our results suggest that, when changes in motivation are being evaluated, long periods of diet exposure made no further contribution, once motivation decreased, it remained low up to 18 weeks. Exposure to a HFHSc diet is a useful animal model of obesity, since it replicates some pathophysiological and psychological features of human obesity such as an increase in fasting glucose levels, body weight and the weight of adipose tissue. •Two weeks of diet-induced obesity reduced motivation for up to 20 weeks.•Obesity pathopsycophysiological alterations were reproduced by the HFHSc model.•Pre-exposure to reinforcer impacts subject’s performance in the PR schedule.
ISSN:0376-6357
1872-8308
DOI:10.1016/j.beproc.2022.104737