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Mounjaro Jab May Curb Food Cravings by Altering Brain Signals, Study Finds

Summary

  • Mounjaro suppresses brain signals linked to eating control and food cravings
  • Study analyzed brain activity of 3 obese patients, 1 on Mounjaro
  • Electrical stimulation and Mounjaro reduced "food preoccupation" brain signals
Mounjaro Jab May Curb Food Cravings by Altering Brain Signals, Study Finds

According to a first-of-its-kind study published on 2025-11-18T06:46:42+00:00, the weight-loss drug Mounjaro may help slash food cravings by suppressing brain signals linked to eating control. Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania placed electrodes in the brains of 3 severely obese patients to study the drug's impact on the brain's reward system.

The study found that episodes of intense food preoccupation and cravings were associated with low-frequency brain signals, known as delta-theta activity, in the nucleus accumbens. In 2 patients, electrical stimulation to this brain region reduced these signals. The third patient, who was taking Mounjaro for diabetes after weight-loss surgery, also experienced a decline in delta-theta activity and food cravings.

However, the brain signals and food cravings returned a few months later in the Mounjaro patient. The findings suggest the drug may tackle food cravings by affecting the brain signal biomarkers associated with eating control. Experts caution that the study looked at a specific condition linked to obesity, and the results may not apply to the general population.

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Mounjaro, a weight-loss drug, has been shown to suppress low-frequency brain signals in the nucleus accumbens, a part of the brain's reward system, which are linked to episodes of intense food preoccupation and cravings in obese patients.
The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, analyzed brain activity in 3 severely obese patients and found that Mounjaro and electrical stimulation to the brain's reward system reduced the "food preoccupation" signals associated with eating control.
While Mounjaro initially resulted in a decline in the patient's delta-theta brain activity and food cravings, these effects returned a few months later, suggesting the drug's impact on the brain's eating control signals may be temporary.

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