4.4 Article

Brain activity and connectivity changes in response to nutritive natural sugars, non-nutritive natural sugar replacements and artificial sweeteners

Journal

NUTRITIONAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 5, Pages 395-405

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1028415X.2019.1639306

Keywords

MRI; energy ingestion; brain activity; eigen vector centrality; functional network connectivity; nutritive sweeteners; non-nutritive sweeteners; artificial sweeteners

Funding

  1. Unilever Research and Development Vlaardingen B. V. The Netherlands
  2. Unilever markets food and drink products

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The study found that glucose and fructose led to decreased BOLD signal in specific areas of the brain, while sucralose and allulose had no effect on BOLD signal or network connectivity. However, sucralose did increase eigen vector centrality values in certain brain regions. This suggests that the type of sweetener used can impact brain responses and potentially affect feeding behavior and reward responses.
Introduction: The brain plays an important regulatory role in directing energy homeostasis and eating behavior. The increased ingestion of sugars and sweeteners over the last decades makes investigating the effects of these substances on the regulatory function of the brain of particular interest. We investigated whole brain functional response to the ingestion of nutrient shakes sweetened with either the nutritive natural sugars glucose and fructose, the low- nutritive natural sugar replacement allulose or the non-nutritive artificial sweetener sucralose. Methods: Twenty healthy, normal weight, adult males underwent functional MRI on four separate visits. In a double-blind randomized study setup, participants received shakes sweetened with glucose, fructose, allulose or sucralose. Resting state functional MRI was performed before and after ingestion. Changes in Blood Oxygen Level Dependent (BOLD) signal, functional network connectivity and voxel based connectivity by Eigenvector Centrality Mapping (ECM) were measured. Results: Glucose and fructose led to significant decreased BOLD signal in the cingulate cortex, insula and the basal ganglia. Glucose led to a significant increase in eigen vector centrality throughout the brain and a significant decrease in eigen vector centrality in the midbrain. Sucralose and allulose had no effect on BOLD signal or network connectivity but sucralose did lead to a significant increase in eigen vector centrality values in the cingulate cortex, central gyri and temporal lobe. Discussion: Taken together our findings show that even in a shake containing fat and protein, the type of sweetener can affect brain responses and might thus affect reward and satiety responses and feeding behavior. The sweet taste without the corresponding energy content of the non-nutritive sweeteners appeared to have only small effects on the brain. Indicating that the while ingestion of nutritive sugars could have a strong effect on feeding behavior, both in a satiety aspect as well as rewarding aspects, non-nutritive sweeteners appear to not have these effects.

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