Pot-bellied people are more likely to develop memory loss and dementia later in their life, says new study. Neurological scientists at the Rush University Medical Center in
collaboration with the National Institutes of Health have discovered
that same protein that controls fat metabolism in the liver resides in
the memory center of the brain (hippocampus) and controls memory and
learning. Kalipada Pahan, PhD, the Floyd A. Davis professor of neurology at Rush
University Medical Centerm, said that better understanding is needed
about how fat is connected to memory and lea...Pot-bellied people are more likely to develop memory loss and dementia later in their life, says new study.Neurological scientists at the Rush University Medical Center in
collaboration with the National Institutes of Health have discovered
that same protein that controls fat metabolism in the liver resides in
the memory center of the brain (hippocampus) and controls memory and
learning. Kalipada Pahan, PhD, the Floyd A. Davis professor of neurology at Rush
University Medical Centerm, said that better understanding is needed
about how fat is connected to memory and learning so that effective
approach to protect memory and learning can be developed. The liver is the body's major fat metabolizing organ. Peroxisome
proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha) is known to control
fat metabolism in the liver. Accordingly, PPARalpha is highly expressed
in the liver. Since PPARalpha directly controls fat metabolism, people with abdominal
fat levels have depleted PPARalpha in the liver and abnormal lipid
metabolism. According to Pahan, at first, these individuals lose PPARalpha from the
liver and then eventually from the whole body including the brain.
Therefore, abdominal fat is an early indication of some kind of dementia
later in life. The study has been published in journal Cell Reports.Source-ANI
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