Five years ago, I told you how food addictions are related to changes in brain chemistry that are not unlike those experienced by patients taking illegal drugs. The U.S. Department of Energy recently came to same conclusion, this time with the assistance of a gastric stimulator, a device like a pacemaker that influences the vagus nerve by telling the brain the stomach is full.
Researchers studied the chemistry of seven patients with those same stimulators by doing brain scans two weeks apart, during which a patient's gastric stimulator was turned on for one test and off for the other.
Traditional wisdom once assumed the hypothalamus alone controlled satiety, but researchers found no activity there. Instead, when the stimulators were activated, the hippocampus, orbitofrontal cortex and striatum -- areas of the brain linked to sensory and motor impulses, emotional behavior and drug addiction -- were far more active.
No wonder, it often feels as if the emotional connection to cravings is more powerful than the physical connection, just another reason why treating emotions with a safe, effective tool like the Emotional Freedom Technique does matter.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences October 5, 2006 Free Full Text PDF
Consumer Affairs.com October 4, 2006
Yahoo News October 2, 2006
BBC News October 3, 2006