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“Mice are a good model for human obesity . . . but it seems to me that, for diet, the mouse literature has gone off track,” said Craig Warden, who studies the genetics of body fat accumulation at the ...
Research in mice by scientists at the University of California (UC), Berkeley, has now revealed an unsuspected brain mechanism that may explain why a chronic high-fat diet (HFD) can reduce the ...
The study demonstrated that male mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD) to induce obesity had increased neutrophil numbers. Additionally, the neutrophils present exhibited the markers of either immature ...
This study used mice that were put into a group fed a normal diet, or a group fed a high-fat diet. Then the researchers collected neutrophils from these mice and analyzed them. Neutrophils from mice ...
While raising mice on a high-fat diet, Gazit Shimoni noticed a striking paradox: While in their home cages, these mice strongly preferred high-fat chow, which contained 60% fat, over normal chow ...
"We found that this same feeling occurs in mice on a normal diet, but is missing in those on a high-fat diet. They may keep eating out of habit or boredom, rather than genuine enjoyment." Gazit ...
Researchers explore the role of a high-fat diet in promoting the formation of premetastatic niches and platelet activation.
SO FOR ME, WHEN I STARTED STUDYING OBESITY, I WAS EXPECTING IN MICE. WHEN YOU PUT THEM ON HIGH FAT DIET THAT WE’RE GOING TO SEE SOME KIND OF LIKE FOOD ADDICTION, THEY’RE GOING TO BE SO EAGER ...
"We found that this same feeling occurs in mice on a normal diet, but is missing in those on a high-fat diet. They may keep eating out of habit or boredom, rather than genuine enjoyment." ...