Neuroimaging Biomarkers of Caloric Restriction on Brain Metabolic and Vascular Functions
Current Nutrition Reports(2017)
Sanders-Brown Center on Aging
Abstract
Purpose of Review Non-invasive neuroimaging methods have been developed as powerful tools for identifying in vivo brain functions for studies in humans and animals. Here, we review the imaging biomarkers that are being used to determine the changes within brain metabolic and vascular functions induced by caloric restriction (CR) and their potential usefulness for future studies with dietary interventions in humans. Recent Findings CR causes an early shift in brain metabolism of glucose to ketone bodies and enhances ATP production, neuronal activity, and cerebral blood flow (CBF). With age, CR preserves mitochondrial activity, neurotransmission, CBF, and spatial memory. CR also reduces anxiety in aging mice. Neuroimaging studies in humans show that CR restores abnormal brain activity in the amygdala of women with obesity and enhances brain connectivity in old adults. Summary Neuroimaging methods have excellent translational values and can be widely applied in future studies to identify dietary effects on brain functions in humans.
MoreTranslated text
Key words
Caloric restriction,Positron emission tomography (PET),Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS),Glucose metabolism,Ketone bodies,Cerebral blood flow,Mammalian target of rapamcyin (mTOR),Brain aging,Alzheimer’s disease,Memory,Anxiety,Translational research
PDF
View via Publisher
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example

Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Data Disclaimer
The page data are from open Internet sources, cooperative publishers and automatic analysis results through AI technology. We do not make any commitments and guarantees for the validity, accuracy, correctness, reliability, completeness and timeliness of the page data. If you have any questions, please contact us by email: report@aminer.cn
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined