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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05574660

Effect of High-fat/High-sugar Diet on Food Reward Signaling

Influence of High Fat Feeding on Brain and Behaviour in Individuals at Genetic Risk of Obesity

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
82 (actual)
Sponsor
Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

In this randomized, single-blinded basic research study, healthy normal-weight human participants are exposed to a high-fat/high-sugar (HF/HS) snack or a low-fat/low-sugar (LF/LS) snack twice a day for eight weeks in addition to their regular diet. All participants are tested at baseline, after 4 weeks and after 8 weeks of dietary intervention. At all time points the investigators acquire the following parameters: * Body weight and composition, * Blood parameters to control for metabolic changes, * Visual analog scales (hunger, satiety, tiredness, etc.), * Fat and sugar concentration preference, * Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) during a learning and a gustatory perception task. The investigators hypothesize that the habitual consumption of a small HF/HS snack will reduce the preference for low-fat concentrations and will have an impact on brain response to the anticipation and consumption of palatable food. Moreover, the investigators hypothesize, that HF/HS diet will have an impact neuronal encoding of learning independent of food cues. The investigators expect these alterations independent of body weight gain suggesting a direct effect of HF/HS diet on neuronal circuits.

Detailed description

In this randomized, single-blinded basic research study, healthy normal-weight human participants are exposed to a high-fat/high-sugar (HF/HS) snack or a low-fat/low-sugar (LF/LS) snack twice a day for eight weeks in addition to their regular diet. The investigators test the effect of this dietary intervention on body weight, metabolic parameters such as insulin sensitivity, blood cholesterol and triglycerides, the preference of fat and sugar taste, the brain response to milkshake anticipation and consumption, and as the neuronal coding of prediction error learning. Here, all participants are tested at baseline, after 4 weeks and after 8 weeks of dietary intervention using behavioral tasks, fMRI and blood sampling. The investigators hypothesize that the habitual consumption of a small HF/HS snack will reduce the preference for low-fat concentrations and impact brain response to the anticipation and consumption of palatable food. Moreover, the investigators hypothesize, that HF/HS diet will have an impact neuronal encoding of learning independent of food cues. The investigators expect these alterations independent of body weight gain suggesting a direct effect of HF/HS diet on neuronal circuits.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTHigh-Fat/High-Sugar (HF/HS) Diet
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTLow-Fat/Low-Sugar (LF/LS) Diet

Timeline

Start date
2016-03-09
Primary completion
2018-10-24
Completion
2018-10-24
First posted
2022-10-10
Last updated
2022-10-10

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05574660. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.