The influence of physical activity on neural responses to visual food cues in humans: A systematic review of functional magnetic resonance imaging studies
- PMID: 37236384
- DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2023.105247
The influence of physical activity on neural responses to visual food cues in humans: A systematic review of functional magnetic resonance imaging studies
Abstract
This systematic review examined whether neural responses to visual food-cues measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) are influenced by physical activity. Seven databases were searched up to February 2023 for human studies evaluating visual food-cue reactivity using fMRI alongside an assessment of habitual physical activity or structured exercise exposure. Eight studies (1 exercise training, 4 acute crossover, 3 cross-sectional) were included in a qualitative synthesis. Structured acute and chronic exercise appear to lower food-cue reactivity in several brain regions, including the insula, hippocampus, orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), postcentral gyrus and putamen, particularly when viewing high-energy-density food cues. Exercise, at least acutely, may enhance appeal of low-energy-density food-cues. Cross-sectional studies show higher self-reported physical activity is associated with lower reactivity to food-cues particularly of high-energy-density in the insula, OFC, postcentral gyrus and precuneus. This review shows that physical activity may influence brain food-cue reactivity in motivational, emotional, and reward-related processing regions, possibly indicative of a hedonic appetite-suppressing effect. Conclusions should be drawn cautiously given considerable methodological variability exists across limited evidence.
Keywords: Appetite; Brain; Exercise; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Physical activity; Visual food cues.
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of Competing Interest LJJ has current funding from Entrinsic Beverage Company LLC, Entrinsic Bioscience, LLC, Volac International Ltd, Herbalife Europe Ltd, Bridge Farm Nurseries and Decathlon SA, and has previously received funding from PepsiCo Inc. and British Summer Fruits; has performed consultancy for PepsiCo Inc. and Lucozade, Ribena Suntory, and has received conference fees from PepsiCo Inc. and Danone Nutricia. In all cases, monies have been paid to LJJs institution and not to LJJ.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
