SuppVersity Suggested Read: Dietary sugars: their detection by the - TopicsExpress



          

SuppVersity Suggested Read: Dietary sugars: their detection by the gut–brain axis and their peripheral and central effects in health and diseases This review highlights opposing effects of glucose and fructose on metabolism and eating behaviour. Peripheral glucose and fructose sensing may influence eating behaviour by sweet-tasting mechanisms in the mouth and gut, and by glucose-sensing mechanisms in the gut. Glucose may impact brain reward regions and eating behaviour directly by crossing the blood–brain barrier, and indirectly by peripheral neural input and by oral and intestinal sweet taste/sugar-sensing mechanisms, whereas those promoted by fructose orally ingested seem to rely only on these indirect mechanisms. Open access @ ow.ly/HX6G2 suppversity | Ochoa, Melissa, et al. Dietary sugars: their detection by the gut–brain axis and their peripheral and central effects in health and diseases. European journal of nutrition (2014): 1-24.
Posted on: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 15:26:46 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015