
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) -Researchers monitoring the brain activity of a patient with a severe binge-eating problem reported that Eli Lilly's GLP-1 weight-loss drug appeared to temporarily suppress food-craving signals in the "reward center" of the brain.
These are the first direct measurements of brain activity in a person receiving tirzepatide, sold as Mounjaro for diabetes and Zepbound for weight loss, shedding light on the treatment's impact on so-called food noise.
The report, published on Monday in Nature Medicine, describes the effect of tirzepatide on a single individual, and the findings cannot be generalized to others, the researchers cautioned. But it may suggest a role for future versions of Mounjaro or other GLP-1 drugs in treating certain eating disorders, they said.
“Hopefully this report inspires some rigorous investigation of that possibility,” said study leader Dr. Casey Halpern of the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
The study followed four patients participating in the first human trial of deep-brain stimulation for treating loss-of-control eating disorders such as binge-eating and bulimia.
The plan was to monitor activity in the brain's reward center, or nucleus accumbens, and use a surgically implanted device to send electrical impulses to block signals that “ramp up” before binge-eating episodes, Halpern said.
One patient's doctor had prescribed tirzepatide before the electrodes were implanted to treat her type 2 diabetes and obesity. During the first few months of electrode monitoring, she reported no food preoccupation and her nucleus accumbens food-craving signals were silent.
Study participants not taking tirzepatide showed the typical elevated activity in the nucleus accumbens and frequent episodes of food preoccupation.
The striking quiet in her nucleus accumbens signaling and food preoccupation suggests that tirzepatide was responsible for the temporary quieting of food noise in this patient, the researchers said.
“Activity in her nucleus accumbens was so quiet that it almost made us think our system wasn't working,” Halpern said.
DRUG IMPACT FADES OVER TIME
Five months later, the researchers saw signs that tirzepatide’s effects on this patient’s behavioral disorder were temporary, and “food noise” was breaking through.
They detected nucleus accumbens activity consistent with binge-eating, and the patient reported episodes of severe food preoccupation.
The reason tirzepatide’s effect on out-of-control eating was only temporary in this case is likely because the drug was designed and optimized for diabetes and weight loss, not for binge-eating disorders, Halpern surmised.
Current popular weight-loss drugs mimic hormones found in the small intestine and pancreas and are not designed to impact the brain’s reward mechanisms.
To have a lasting effect on severe food preoccupation, GLP-1 drugs would need to be redesigned to impact the nucleus accumbens and optimized for mental health, Halpern said.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill Berkrot)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
The Solution to Innovative Peculiarity: Analyzing the Fate of Mankind - 2
The Main 15 Applications for Efficiency and Association - 3
The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks tonight, but will the full 'Wolf Moon' outshine the show? - 4
New Cheetos and Doritos will be free of artificial dyes - 5
Instructions to Improve Your Mental Exploration with Cutting edge Measurements
The Main 20 Photography Instagram Records to Follow
Why are malnutrition deaths soaring in America?
Who is behind Al-Majd, the Israeli-linked evacuation group sending Gazans to South Africa?
Zelensky sees new Russian attack threat from Belarus
NASA's Apollo 8 moonshot saved 1968. Could Artemis 2 do the same in 2026?
Vote In favor of Your Favored Kind Of Tea
Vote In favor of Your Number one Savvy Beds
Are IDF reservists properly armed during post-war operations?
Instructions to Perceive and Grasp the Early Side effects of Cellular breakdown in the lungs













