Affiliation:
1. Department of Health and Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Universidad San Pablo-CEU, CEU Universities, Madrid, Spain
Abstract
The interaction between meal timing and light regulates circadian rhythms in mammals and not only
determines the sleep-wake pattern but also the activity of the endocrine system. Related with that, the necessity to
fulfill energy needs is a driving force that requires the participation of cognitive skills whose performance has
been shown to undergo circadian variations. These facts have led to the concept that cognition and feeding behaviour
can be analysed from a chronobiological perspective. In this context, research carried out during the last two
decades has evidenced the link between feeding behaviour/nutritional habits and cognitive processes, and has
highlighted the impact of circadian disorders on cognitive decline. All that has allowed hypothesizing a tight
relationship between nutritional factors, chronobiology, and cognition. In this connection, experimental diets
containing elevated amounts of fat and sugar (high-fat diets; HFDs) have been shown to alter in rodents the circadian
distribution of meals, and to have a negative impact on cognition and motivational aspects of behaviour
that disappear when animals are forced to adhere to a standard temporal eating pattern. In this review, we will
present relevant studies focussing on the effect of HFDs on cognitive aspects of behaviour, paying particular
attention to the influence that chronobiological alterations caused by these diets may have on hippocampaldependent
cognition.
Funder
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Tecnología
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmacology
Cited by
9 articles.
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