Healthy Volunteers Clinical Trial
Official title:
Metabolic and Neural Adaptations to Weight Loss, Plateau, and Regain
Background:
- Many people can lose weight by changing their diet or exercise. However, most people
eventually regain the weight over time. This weight regain may be related to changes in
metabolism as well as changes in the brain caused by weight loss. Researchers want to learn
more about these changes.
Objective:
- To see how weight loss and regain affects the body s metabolism and the brain of obese but
healthy adults.
Eligibility:
- Obese but healthy adults age 18-55 who plan to participate in a weight loss program at one
of several participating clinics or resorts.
Design:
- Participants will first be screened at home through questionnaires and telephone
interviews.
- Participants will then be screened at the NIH with blood tests, medical history,
physical exam, electrocardiograms, and questionnaires. They will have a mock magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) scan.
- At visit 1, participants will stay at the NIH and will:
- have MRI and PET brain scans.
- have body composition scans and measurements.
- give blood samples.
- eat a special diet.
- wear a physical activity monitor.
- provide a urine sample and body weight daily.
- drink a special type of water to measure calorie burn.
- wear a clear plastic hood over their head while lying down, to collect exhaled air.
- spend 24 hours in a room that measures oxygen and carbon dioxide.
- complete questionnaires and computer tasks.
- After visit 1, participants will give daily urine samples and weight and physical
activity measurements from home. Then they will follow a lifestyle intervention for
weight loss and give daily weight and activity measurements.
- Visits 2, 3, and 4 occur 1-26 months after the start of the weight loss program.
Participants will repeat procedures from visit 1. Visits 1-4 last 4 days each.
- Researchers will track participants weight and physical activity for up to 26 months
after visit 2.
Lifestyle interventions can result in weight loss, but most people experience a plateau after
6-10 months when weight stabilizes and many subsequently regain weight over the subsequent
months. This pattern of weight plateau and regain is typical and appears to be independent of
the lifestyle intervention used. The apparent resistance to further weight loss in not well
understood.
We recently demonstrated that participants engaged in an intensive intervention employing
caloric restriction and vigorous exercise had a profound slowing of metabolism that was
significantly greater than expected due to weight loss alone. This phenomenon is called
metabolic adaptation and has also been observed following weight loss through caloric
restriction without exercise and may persist long after weight loss has ceased. Metabolic
adaptation has been hypothesized to limit weight loss and predispose individuals to weight
regain, but this has yet to be demonstrated and the concept is controversial. In addition to
the metabolic adaptations to weight loss, the brain also adapts in ways that enhance the
activation of reward regions in response to palatable food cues and their receipt. In
particular, the brain s dopamine circuitry is believed to be altered in obesity and it is
presently unclear how this pathway responds to a weight loss intervention in humans.
The primary aims of this study are to investigate the metabolic and neural adaptations in 60
obese adult volunteers participating in lifestyle interventions resulting in weight loss
through a structured meal replacement program or caloric restriction plus vigorous exercise.
The secondary aim is to determine whether the magnitude of metabolic adaptation or the
changes in the brain s reward circuitry or responsiveness to food cues are related to the
ubiquitous weight loss plateau after 6-10 months or the rate of weight regain in the
subsequent months.
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