Mar 28, 2025 at 3:50 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.
21 23amsterdam_pete, LondonLisa, mike_nyc and 18 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report