M. Chavez et al., CHEMICAL LESION OF VISCERAL AFFERENTS CAUSES TRANSIENT OVERCONSUMPTION OF UNFAMILIAR HIGH-FAT DIETS IN RATS, American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology, 41(5), 1997, pp. 1657-1663
Because it is commonly assumed that the major role of visceral afferen
ts in food intake control is to terminate meals by carrying negative-f
eedback signals to the brain, we hypothesized that overconsumption sho
uld occur in rats with chemically lesioned visceral afferents if they
were presented with an unfamiliar diet. Adult male Sprague-Dawley (SD)
rats were treated with multiple doses of capsaicin or vehicle as a co
ntrol. Five weeks later, a series of 3-h feeding tests after 24-h depr
ivation was carried out, first with chow and then with either a solid
(vegetable shortening) or liquid (Ensure) unfamiliar high-fat diet. Bo
th groups consumed similar amounts of their powdered chow maintenance
diet, but capsaicin-treated rats consumed at least 50% more of either
high-fat diet than vehicle controls (P <0.01) at the beginning of the
first trial. During second and third trials with the now-familiar high
-fat diet, intake was no longer significantly different between the tw
o groups, suggesting rapid engagement of redundant control mechanisms.
These results support a role of capsaicin-sensitive visceral afferent
s in providing negative feedback for early meal termination during the
ingestion of unfamiliar diets.