4.6 Article

Neural correlates of executive functions in patients with obesity

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5002

Keywords

Diffusion tensor imaging; Obesity; Executive function; Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging; Generalized q-sampling imaging

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taipei, Taiwan [NSC103-2420-H-182A-001, MOST104-2314-B-040-001]
  2. Health Information and Epidemiology Laboratory, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Chiayi, Taiwan [CLRPG6G0041]

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Obesity is one of the most challenging problems in human health and is recognized as an important risk factor for many chronic diseases. It remains unclear how the neural systems (e.g., the mesolimbic reward and the prefrontal control neural systems) are correlated with patients' executive function (EF), conceptualized as the integration of cool EF and hot EF. Cool EF refers to relatively abstract, nonaffective operations such as inhibitory control and mental flexibility. Hot EF refers to motivationally significant affective operations such as affective decision-making. We tried to find the correlation between structural and functional neuroimaging indices and EF in obese patients. The study population comprised seventeen patients with obesity (seven males and 10 females, BMI = 37.99 +/- 5.40, age = 31.82 +/- 8.75 year-old) preparing to undergo bariatric surgery. We used noninvasive diffusion tensor imaging, generalized q-sampling imaging, and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the neural correlations between structural and functional neuroimaging indices and EF performances in patients with obesity. We reported that many brain areas are correlated to the patients' EF performances. More interestingly, some correlations may implicate the possible associations of EF and the incentive motivational effects of food. The neural correlation between the left precuneus and middle occipital gyrus and inhibitory control may suggest that patients with a better ability to detect appetitive food may have worse inhibitory control. Also, the neural correlation between the superior frontal blade and affective decision-making may suggest that patients' affective decision-making may be associated with the incentive motivational effects of food. Our results provide evidence suggesting neural correlates of EF in patients with obesity.

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