Food Cravings
Introduction
Intense desire to eat specific foods that are highly palatable and energy-dense.
Conditioned response to food-related stimuli
Types
Cue-induced - Sight or smell
Tonic - Imagioning the food
State - Cravings at a particular time
Trait - General desire for a particular food with or without cues
Food addiction as a model
Explains failing to adhere to a particular diet
Lack of control
Lack of satisfaction after a meal
Lack of satiety
Similar traits of craving, withdrawal, and loss of control when compared to other addictions
Food intake
Homeostatic system
Regulate energy
Hormonal and neuronal feedback from the small intestine, pancreas, liver, adipose tissue, and brainstem
Regulates appetite and food-intake behaviour
Coordinates hunger, satiation (feeling of fullness), and satiety (duration of fullness)
Two antagonistic neuron sets
Orexigenic agouti-related peptide (AGRP/Neuropeptide Y)
Anorexigenic pro-opimelanocortin neurons (POMC)
Maintains a weight set point and defends our fat mass
Hedonic system
Mesocorticolimbic yststem
Mediates food via neural mechanisms
Includes learning, memory, reward, attention, decision-making, mood, and emotionality
Eating for pleasure
Eating that occurs in response to sight, smell, and taste
Mediated by dopamine (wanting) and opioid (liking) pathways
Interaction
Systems work together to focus on reward
Can cause weight gain
People have a weight trajectory, usually up
Stress, trauma, and relationship with food affect this
Particularly palatable foods that are high in fat, sugar, salt
Sustained weight loss
Hard to maintain without surgical or pharmacological intervention
A systemic review of lifestyle interventions for obesity found a mean weight loss of 7%
Once interventions ceased, participants returned to pre-treatment baselines
Mean time to regain all weight was 4 years
Obesogenic environment
Energy-dense, highly palatable foods are readily available
Food is available in large portions
Abundant food cues (advertising)
Weight loss and treatment strategies
When losing weight, the mechanisms of cravings will increase
Energy expenditure reduces, movement decreases, and fidgetting decreases
Best treatments help the patient with control
Ketogenic diets suppress appetite, helps with control
Drugs
Orlistat - Doesn’t help with control
Phentermine - Suppress appetite
Liraglutide - Suppress appetite
Contrave - Suppress appetite
Surgery
Helps sense of control, sense of eating less
Some evidence changes response to food cues
Lifestyle
Low Energy Diets - Short-term increase in cravings, longer-term suppression
Physical ACtivity - Does not increase food cravings, may decrease
Obesity Phenotypes
Abnormal satiation (feeling of fullness) - Consider Phentermine + Topiramate extended release
Abnormal hedonic eating - Contrave
Abnormal satiety (duration of fullness) - Liraglutide
Low predicted energy expenditure - Duromine
Tools
Assess patient’s confidence that they can resist overeating
References
Australian Obesity Management Algorithm - Science Direct
Red Book - RACGP
Food Cravings in People Who are Overweight - Think GP