Photography by Jason Henry

Shocking the Brain to Treat the Stomach

A new clinical trial will zap the brain’s reward center to help people who struggle with obesity and binge eating

Dana G Smith
Elemental
Published in
10 min readAug 12, 2019

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AA mouse hangs out in a cage, oblivious to the wire sticking out of its head and recording its brain activity. The mouse strolls around before making its way to the corner where a food pellet — full of fat and extra delicious — lies. The mouse takes a bite and then keeps eating and eating and eating. A graph measuring the mouse’s brain activity goes crazy, spiking upward again and again and again.

Another mouse with an identical wire is in an identical cage with an identical food pellet. When it walks over to the pellet, there is a similar jump in its brain activity. But before the mouse can tuck into the food, a tiny electric shock passes through the wire into the mouse’s brain. The mouse turns around and walks away. Every time the mouse moves toward the pellet, its brain activity peaks, the electrical stimulation starts, and the mouse changes its mind and reverses course.

A mouse brain in a vial in the lab of Casey Halpern, MD, at Stanford University.

These mice are trained to binge eat by scientists who expose them to high-fat food and then take it…

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Dana G Smith
Elemental

Health and science writer • PhD in 🧠 • Words in Scientific American, STAT, The Atlantic, The Guardian • Award-winning Covid-19 coverage for Elemental