Gourmand syndrome

Gourmand syndrome is a very rare and benign eating disorder that usually occurs six to twelve months after an injury to the frontal lobe.[1][2][3][4] Those with the disorder usually have suffered from a right hemisphere frontal or temporal brain lesion typically affecting the cortical areas, basal ganglia or limbic structures.[3][2][5][6] These people develop a new, post-injury passion for gourmet food.[3][2][5][4]

Gourmand syndrome
Frontal lobe (at right)
SpecialtyNeurology

There are two main aspects of gourmand syndrome: first, the fine dining habits and changes to taste, and second, the obsessive component, which may result in craving and preservation.[2] Gourmand syndrome can be related to, and shares biological features with, addictive and obsessive disorders.[2][3] The syndrome was first characterised in 1997.[3]

Signs and symptoms

Causes

It is believed that the frontotemporal circuits, normally involved in healthy eating, can, when injured, cause gourmand syndrome in patients.[4]

History

Only 36 people had been diagnosed with gourmand syndrome as of 2001.[6] In many of these cases, the patient did not have any interest in food beforehand nor had any family history with eating disorders.[5][2][3]

The first, most famous case was seen in 1997 by Regard and Landis in the journal Neurology:[2][3] after a Swiss stroke patient was released from the hospital, he immediately quit his job as a political journalist and took up the profession of food critic.[3] Regard and Landis also observed an athletic businessman with this condition whose family was shocked to see such a sudden, drastic change in his diet.[3]

Only one case of gourmand syndrome has been reported in a child. He was born with issues with his right temporal lobe; at eight years old he began to experience seizures, within the year of the seizures beginning, his behavior began to change to the symptoms of gourmand syndrome.[2]

In 2014, a man that was once interested in marathon running now was only interested in gastronomy, traveling hundreds or thousands of miles to eat gourmet food. He became a famous gastronomic critic and gained 50 kg (110 pounds).[5]

gollark: Human values are not known, not consistent, and not stable.
gollark: You are *not* going to find a good one.
gollark: I could say something like "utilitarianism leads to bad conclusions like "let's tile the entire universe with human brains constantly being given heroin"" but really that's just appealing to intuitionism anyway.
gollark: Wildly guessing what things are ethical, of course.
gollark: Essentially, I am INSULTING utilitarianism.

References

  1. Pascual-Leone, Alvaro; Alonso-Alonso, Miguel (2007-04-25). "The Right Brain Hypothesis for Obesity". JAMA. 297 (16): 1819–1822. doi:10.1001/jama.297.16.1819. ISSN 0098-7484. PMID 17456824.
  2. Kurian, M.; Schmitt-Mechelke, T.; Korff, C.; Delavelle, J.; Landis, T.; Seeck, M. (2008). ""Gourmand syndrome" in a child with pharmacoresistant epilepsy". Epilepsy & Behavior. 13 (2): 413–415. doi:10.1016/j.yebeh.2008.04.004. PMID 18502182.
  3. Regard, Marianne; Landis, Theodor (1997). ""Gourmand syndrome": Eating passion associated with right anterior lesions". Neurology. 48 (5): 1185–1190. doi:10.1212/WNL.48.5.1185. PMID 9153440.
  4. Uher, R.; Treasure, J. (2004). "Brain lesions and eating disorders". J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 76 (6): 852–857. doi:10.1136/jnnp.2004.048819. PMC 1739667. PMID 15897510.
  5. Gallo, M.; Gámiz, F.; Perez-Garíca, M.; Morals, R.; Rolls, T. (2014). "Taste and olfactory status in a gourmand with a right amygdala lesion". Neurocase. 20 (4): 421–433. doi:10.1080/13554794.2013.791862. PMID 23668221.
  6. Cummings, Jeffery L.; Lichter, David G. (2001). Frontal-Subcortical Circuits in Psychiatric and Neurological Disorders. New York, London: Guliford Press. pp. 167–169. ISBN 1-57230-623-8.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.