Sep 26, 2025 at 2:02 PM#6
Building on the "food noise" concept — I think this reflects a shift from homeostatic to hedonic eating circuits.
Homeostatic eating is regulated by the ARC-PVN axis (energy balance, hunger/satiety). This circuit is relatively straightforward: GLP-1R on POMC neurons → α-MSH → MC4R on PVN neurons → satiety.
Hedonic eating is regulated by the VTA-NAc-OFC circuit (wanting/liking, craving, reward prediction). This is phylogenetically newer and MUCH harder to study.
GLP-1RAs appear to act on BOTH circuits simultaneously:
- Hypothalamic circuit: "You've had enough calories" → reduces homeostatic drive
- Mesolimbic circuit: "Food isn't as rewarding" → reduces hedonic drive
The "food noise" patients describe is likely the hedonic circuit — the intrusive thoughts about food, the inability to stop thinking about the next meal. GLP-1RAs are essentially turning down the gain on the mesolimbic food salience signal.
> "Patients treated with semaglutide 2.4 mg reported significantly lower scores on the Food Craving Inventory (−35%, P<0.001) and the Power of Food Scale (−42%, P<0.001), which measure hedonic aspects of eating behavior, with reductions exceeding those attributable to caloric restriction alone."
> — Wadden et al., *JAMA*, 2021; 325(14):1403–1413
One speculative but intriguing question: could chronic GLP-1R agonism in the reward circuit lead to anhedonia? Some patients report emotional blunting or reduced pleasure from activities beyond eating. This needs systematic study.
30 21JakeSmashed95, NauseaFreeNow, SteveThurs and 27 others
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