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By Stephen Beech

People prefer high-calorie food - regardless of their shape or size, suggests a new study.

Higher calorie foods were preferred in experiments - despite similar taste and texture, say scientists.

Study lead author Dr. Albino Oliveira-Maia said: "Eating sends signals to the brain with information about a food’s energy content, which can influence food preferences irrespective of flavor.

"People with obesity often have impairments in areas of the brain where dopamine is released, which may drive reward-related eating and a preference for energy-dense foods rich in fat and sugars.

"Weight loss due to bariatric surgery has been associated to a normalization of reward-related eating with a shift of preferences toward healthier options, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood."

In the study, after examining a large group of healthy volunteers, researchers compared food preferences in three groups: 11 obese people, 23 post-bariatric surgery patients, and 27 non-obese participants.

The research team gave participants sweetened low-fat yogurt with and without maltodextrin - a carbohydrate that adds calories to the yogurt with no impact on taste or texture.

Participants ate the yogurt at home, alternating between the maltodextrin-containing and -free yogurt.

The findings, published in the journal PLOS Biology, showed that all three groups ate more of the maltodextrin-containing yogurt, despite rating both as equally pleasant.

And, unexpectedly, the effects of maltodextrin on yogurt consumption were similar in individuals with obesity relative to their non-obese counterparts.

The study also used radioactive iodine labeling and single photon emission computed tomography to visualize dopamine receptors in the brain.

Dr. Oliveira-Maia, of the Champalimaud Foundation in Portugal, said: "Consistent with previous studies, individuals with obesity had lower dopamine receptor availability than non-obese controls.

"Dopamine receptor availability was similar in the surgical and non-obese groups and was associated with more restrained eating.

“We were very intrigued that, while the behavior was guided towards eating yogurts with higher energy content, this did not seem to be a result of explicit choices, since consistent changes in the pleasantness of flavors enriched with carbohydrates were not found.

"Importantly, this behavior was maintained in patients with obesity and after weight-loss surgery, even though there were important differences in their brain dopaminergic system.”

He added: "These results suggest that obesity-related brain changes can be reversed after bariatric surgery, potentially impacting the amount of food consumed but not necessarily the types of food preferred."

Originally published on the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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