Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT05200845
The Role of Altered Nutrient Partitioning in Food Reward
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 20 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 45 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
Obesity remains a public health epidemic despite substantial advances in treatment strategies and therapies in the last decade. Effective strategies to support maintenance of improved metabolic health and reduced body weight are still needed. Signals from the gut to the brain are important in regulating metabolism and energy balance and have been linked with food reward and preference in metabolically healthy individuals with normal body mass index. In particular, post-ingestive signaling related to glucose metabolism has been linked with food reward and preference. However, not much is known about how these gut and brain signals interact to influence eating behaviors in states of obesity or altered metabolic health. In addition, evidence in rodent models and human studies indicates obesity is associated with a blunted brain response to foods compared with normal body weight. However, whether altered nutrient utilization, termed metabolic inflexibility, influences the relationship between obesity and food reward has yet to be studied. The overall objective of this proof-of-concept pilot study is to assess the feasibility of measuring reward response following a flavor-nutrient conditioning paradigm across the normal to obese body mass index (BMI) range and in states of altered metabolic health. The aims of this study are: 1) to determine whether differences in reinforcement learning/flavor-nutrient conditioning of carbohydrate can be measured across the body mass index range; and 2) to determine the feasibility of assessing metabolic flexibility and whether a relationship between metabolic flexibility and calorie-predictive reward can be detected.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | Conditioned Stimulus + (CS+): Flavored beverage solution with 75 calories of sucrose | Participants will consume flavored beverage solutions containing 75 calories of sucrose in 6 exposure sessions within 1 week. One exposure session will include pre- and post-consumption blood draws over a 2-hour period, and one exposure session will include indirect calorimetry measurement pre- and post-consumption. The other 4 exposure sessions will occur at specified times outside the laboratory sessions. Subjective ratings of internal state (i.e., hunger, fullness, and thirst) will be collected throughout each exposure. Subjective ratings of liking and wanting of each beverage will also be assessed. |
| OTHER | Conditioned Stimulus - (CS-): Flavored beverage solution with sweetness-matched sucralose | Participants will consume flavored beverage solutions sweetened with sucralose to match the sweetness of 75 calories of sucrose in 6 exposure sessions within 1 week. One exposure session will include pre- and post-consumption blood draws over a 2-hour period, and one exposure session will include indirect calorimetry measurement pre- and post-consumption. The other 4 exposure sessions will occur at specified times outside the laboratory sessions. Subjective ratings of internal state (i.e., hunger, fullness, and thirst) will be collected throughout each exposure. Subjective ratings of liking and wanting of each beverage will also be assessed. |
| OTHER | High-Fat Test Meal Inside a Metabolic Chamber | A high-fat test meal (60% fat, 20% carbohydrate) will be provided after a 1-hour baseline measurement of substrate oxidation during a 6-hour metabolic chamber stay. Postprandial substrate oxidation will be measured for 5 hours. |
| OTHER | High-Carbohydrate Test Meal Inside a Metabolic Chamber | A high-carbohydrate test meal (60% carbohydrate, 20% fat) will be provided after a 1-hour baseline measurement of substrate oxidation during a 6-hour metabolic chamber stay. Postprandial substrate oxidation will be measured for 5 hours. |
| OTHER | fMRI Scan | A subset of participants with BMI \> 25 will be invited to complete an functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scan as a feasibility measure. fMRI scans will be performed while beverages (without calories) used during the intervention are delivered through a custom manifold fitted to a head coil and connected to a pump system that allows precisely timed and measured delivery of liquids. Because this is feasibility-based measure, the outcome is a count of participants who completed this task. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2022-02-23
- Primary completion
- 2023-06-01
- Completion
- 2023-06-01
- First posted
- 2022-01-21
- Last updated
- 2025-09-08
- Results posted
- 2025-02-13
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05200845. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.