Publications by authors named "Soumya Ravichandran"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the relationship between early life adversity (ELA), food addiction, and brain structure in individuals with obesity, revealing distinct brain patterns related to reward processing.
  • It involved 114 participants who underwent MRIs and filled out questionnaires to assess factors like food addiction and resilience, finding that high levels of ELA correlate with reward-related brain changes linked to food addiction.
  • Additionally, resilience was identified as a protective factor that can mitigate the negative impacts of ELA on food addiction, suggesting that incorporating resilience-building strategies could enhance obesity treatment approaches.
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Importance: Perceived social isolation is associated with negative health outcomes, including increased risk for altered eating behaviors, obesity, and psychological symptoms. However, the underlying neural mechanisms of these pathways are unknown.

Objective: To investigate the association of perceived social isolation with brain reactivity to food cues, altered eating behaviors, obesity, and mental health symptoms.

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Investigating sex as a biological variable is key to determine obesity manifestation and treatment response. Individual neuroimaging modalities have uncovered mechanisms related to obesity and altered ingestive behaviours. However, few, if any, studies have integrated data from multi-modal brain imaging to predict sex-specific brain signatures related to obesity.

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Functional neuroimaging studies in obesity have identified alterations in the connectivity within the reward network leading to decreased homeostatic control of ingestive behavior. However, the neural mechanisms underlying sex differences in the prevalence of food addiction in obesity is unknown. The aim of the study was to identify functional connectivity alterations associated with: (1) Food addiction, (2) Sex- differences in food addiction, (3) Ingestive behaviors.

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