Hyperphagia and obesity following ventromedial hypothalamic lesions in rats with subdiaphragmatic vagotomy |
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Authors: | Bruce M. King Richard G. Carpenter Barbara A. Stamoutsos Lawrence A. Frohman Sebastian P. Grossman |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Behavioral Sciences, Committee on Biopsychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637 USA |
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Abstract: | Bilateral subdiaphragmatic vagotomy chronically reduced body weight to 85–90% of sham vagotomy weight levels in female rats maintained on a standard pellet diet (observed for 114 days). Ventromedial hypothalamic lesions 70 days after vagotomy resulted in marked hyperphagia and obesity, although the increases were not as great as those following lesions in nonvagotomized animals. When the order of surgery was reversed, vagotomy reduced the body weight of obese VMH-lesioned rats to vagotomized control levels, with no evidence of recovery after 90 days. These results suggest that while enhanced vagal activity and/or vagally mediated hyperinsulinemia contribute to VMH lesion-induced overeating and weight gains, they are not necessary for the manifestation of either the hyperphagia or obesity. The importance of adaptation to the effects of vagal transections for the appearance of hypothalamic hyperphagia and obesity is discussed. |
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Keywords: | Ventromedial hypothalamus Vagus nerve Hyperphagia Obesity |
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