Central Regulation of Feeding and Metabolism. New Approaches

Data

Official data in SubjectManager for the following academic year: 2020-2021

Course director

Number of hours/semester

lectures: 12 hours

practices: 0 hours

seminars: 0 hours

total of: 12 hours

Subject data

  • Code of subject: OXE-TIZ-h-T
  • 1 kredit
  • General Medicine
  • Elective modul
  • spring
Prerequisites:

ODA-MB2-T completed , ODA-BEB-T completed , ODA-AA2-T parallel

Course headcount limitations

min. 2 – max. 25

Topic

The high incidence and costs of eating and metabolic disorders make it indispensable to experimentally test new theoretical considerations, and to employ their conclusive results in basically new clinical protocols. Students at early stage of their studies are, thus, encouraged to familiarize with new theoretical aspects and experimental findings.
Neural and humoral mechanisms in the central feeding control and metabolic regulation. Body weight control in health and disease. Peripheral and central taste information processing; gustation in the central regulation of food and fluid intake. Obesity, diabetes mellitus and the metabolic syndrome: New interpretations.

Lectures

  • 1. Physiological significance of food and fluid intake, and metabolism. Homeostasis, motivation. - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 2. Neuronal and humoral factors in the central regulation of homeostatic functions: brain centers, neurotransmitter pathways, neuropeptides. I - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 3. Neuronal and humoral factors in the central regulation of homeostatic functions: brain centers, neurotransmitter pathways, neuropeptides. II - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 4. Neuronal and humoral factors in the central regulation of homeostatic functions: brain centers, neurotransmitter pathways, neuropeptides. III - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 5. Exogenous chemosensory modalities. Physiologic roles of gustation. - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 6. Central taste pathways, "labeled lines", neurons. - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 7. Taste preference, taste aversion, palatability, flavour. - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 8. The glucose-monitoring (GM) neural network. I - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 9. The glucose-monitoring (GM) neural network. II - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 10. Eating and metabolic disorders: obesity, anorexia nervosa, diabetes mellitus, metabolic syndrome. I - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 11. Eating and metabolic disorders: obesity, anorexia nervosa, diabetes mellitus, metabolic syndrome. II - Dr. Karádi Zoltán
  • 12. Feeding and metabolic disorders: disturbance of the GM system? - Dr. Karádi Zoltán

Practices

Seminars

Reading material

Obligatory literature

Guyton & Hall: Textbook of Medical Physiology, Saunders

Literature developed by the Department

Notes

Recommended literature

Williams and Pickup: Handbook of Diabetes, Blackwell
Doty: Handbook of Olfaction and Gustation, Marcel Dekker

Conditions for acceptance of the semester

According to general regulations

Mid-term exams

Individual oral mid-semester test.

Making up for missed classes

Individually discussed

Exam topics/questions

1. Feeding (hunger) and satiety centers; feeding (hunger) and satiety neural pathways.
2. Orexigenic and anorexigenic neuromodulator factors (list up at least 3 of each).
3. The two major neuron types of the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (with respect to feeding); their modulation by insulin, leptin, and ghrelin.
4. Key structures of the central glucose-monitoring neuronal network (list up at least 4 of them).
5. Consequences of selective destruction of central GM neurons (name of the toxic agent, and its effects).

Examiners

Instructor / tutor of practices and seminars