Making sense of metabolic obesity and hedonic obesity.

J Diabetes

Department of Endocrinology, Greenwich Hospital and Northeast Medical Group, Yale-New Haven Health System, Greenwich, Connecticut, USA.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Body weight fluctuates around a set point, influenced by two forces: non-homeostatic forces push weight away, while homeostatic forces work to maintain it.
  • Metabolic obesity occurs when the set point is raised to a higher level, making it difficult for the body to return to a lower weight, whereas hedonic obesity involves overeating driven by reward system impairments without a change in the set point.
  • Effective treatments for both metabolic and hedonic obesity require personalized approaches based on understanding the underlying issues.

Article Abstract

Body weight is neither stationary nor does it change unidirectionally. Rather, body weight usually oscillates up and down around a set point. Two types of forces determine the direction of weight changes. Forces that push body weight away from the set point are defined as non-homeostatic and are governed by multiple mechanisms, including, but not limited to, hedonic regulation of food intake. Forces that restore the set point weight are defined as homeostatic, and they operate through mechanisms that regulate short-term energy balance driven by hunger and satiation and long-term energy balance driven by changes in adiposity. In the normal physiological state, the deviation of body weight from the set point is usually small and temporary, and is constantly corrected by homeostatic forces. Metabolic obesity develops when body weight set point is shifted to an abnormally high level and the obese body weight becomes metabolically defended. In hedonic obesity, the obese body weight is maintained by consistent overeating due to impairments in the reward system, although the set point is not elevated. Adaptive increases in energy expenditure are elicited in hedonic obesity because body weight is elevated above the set point. Neither subtype of obesity undergoes spontaneous resolution unless the underlying disorders are corrected. In this review, the need for both appropriate patient stratification and tailored treatments is discussed in the context of the new framework of metabolic and hedonic obesity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1753-0407.12529DOI Listing

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