Scimex: US researchers suggest that fructose has the ability to enhance the
reward value of high-calorie food, as well as increasing appetite, when
compared to glucose. The study found that fructose did not produce the
same satiety (or fullness) effect for participants that glucose did,
with participants more likely to opt for an immediate high-calorie food
reward, as opposed to a delayed monetary reward, after they had eaten
fructose.
Fructose may enhance the reward value of high-calorie food and promote
eating, compared with glucose, according to a study. Differences in
metabolism of fructose and glucose may lead to differential effects on
physiological and behavioral responses to food. To assess the different
effects of the two sugars on hunger and food cue responses in the brain,
Kathleen A. Page and colleagues conducted fMRI scans on 24 people who
had been given drinks sweetened with fructose on one day and glucose on
another day. Participants were shown images of high-calorie foods and
then reported their level of hunger and desire for the foods.
Participants reported greater hunger and exhibited greater activity in
the orbitofrontal cortex and visual cortex of the brain in response to
the food images after ingesting fructose, compared with responses after
ingesting glucose. Further, the authors found that fructose produced a
smaller plasma insulin response than glucose. When presented with a
choice between delayed monetary rewards or immediate high-calorie food
rewards, participants displayed greater willingness to give up monetary
rewards for food rewards after ingesting fructose than after ingesting
glucose. The results suggest that ingestion of fructose may not produce
the same satiety effects as glucose, according to the authors.