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Dietary fibre acts on brain to suppress appetite

Brian Owens · April 29, 2014 ·

Mouse study suggests that brain activity, not gut hormones, accounts for fibre’s weight-control action.

People have long been told that a diet high in fibre can help to fight obesity, but how it does so has been unclear. A study of mouse metabolism now suggests that a product of fibre fermentation may be directly affecting the hypothalamus, a region of the brain involved in regulating appetite. Read more in Nature.

Nature neuroscience, nutrition, obesity

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