NEURONUTRITION AND DIETARY NEUROMODULATION: HOW THE BRAIN REGULATES HUNGER, COMPULSION, AND BEHAVIOR

Authors

  • Paulina Nunes da Silva UnB
  • Maria Vilani Oliveira Dantas Leite Universidade de Salamanca
  • Gláucia Almeida Rocha Ciulla UFLA
  • Yago de Souza Alemão
  • Jailson da Silva UNINASSAU
  • Renata Kellen Cavalgante Alexandrino HUWC
  • Patrícia Cristina da Silva Pereira Centro Universitário das Américas
  • Danielly das Graças Belarmino Centro Universitário UNA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v11i10.21550

Keywords:

Neuronutrition. Dietary neuromodulation. Hunger control.

Abstract

This narrative review examines how the brain integrates homeostatic, hedonic, and cognitive signals to regulate hunger, binge-eating, and food-related behavior, an emerging framework we term neuronutrition and dietary neuromodulation. We synthesize neurobiological evidence on hypothalamic circuits (notably AgRP/NPY and POMC/CART neurons), brainstem pathways, and the mesolimbic dopaminergic system underlying reward and motivation, alongside top-down modulation from prefrontal cortex and insula. We address the gut–brain axis—including leptin, insulin, ghrelin, GLP-1, and PYY—microbiota interactions, neuroinflammation, and stress (HPA axis) as contributors to hyperphagia and compulsivity. From a behavioral perspective, we analyze how ultra-processed foods, environmental cues, sleep restriction, and circadian misalignment shift reward sensitivity and impair inhibitory control. The review also covers neuromodulation and translational strategies: noninvasive brain stimulation (TMS, tDCS) targeting executive-control and salience networks; pharmacotherapies (e.g., GLP-1 agonists) combined with dietary approaches (diet quality, protein timing, fermentable fibers); and self-regulation tools (neurofeedback, mindfulness, cognitive-behavioral therapy). Finally, we propose an integrative model linking peripheral signals, central circuits, and psychosocial context, highlighting clinical implications for obesity and eating disorders, and methodological gaps (ecologically valid measures, endophenotype-based stratification, and long-term outcomes). By bridging mechanisms and applications, this work provides a practical scaffold for clinicians and researchers seeking to personalize interventions that restore energy homeostasis and reduce compulsive eating.

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Author Biographies

Paulina Nunes da Silva, UnB

Nutricionista, mestre em Educação Física, Universidade de Brasília - UnB.

Maria Vilani Oliveira Dantas Leite, Universidade de Salamanca

Doutora em Nutrição e Saúde Pública pela Universidade de Salamanca, Espanha.

Gláucia Almeida Rocha Ciulla, UFLA

Nutricionista, Especialista em Tecnologia e qualidade de alimentos vegetais pela UFLA.

Yago de Souza Alemão

Nutricionista, Especialista em Nutrição Clínica.

Jailson da Silva, UNINASSAU

Nutricionista, UNINASSAU, campus Recife-PE.

Renata Kellen Cavalgante Alexandrino, HUWC

Nutricionista, Especialista em Nutrição Clínica, Nutrição Materno-infantil e Nutrição no paciente crítico, HUWC/Ebserh – Fortaleza-CE.

Patrícia Cristina da Silva Pereira, Centro Universitário das Américas

Nutricionista pelo Centro Universitário das Américas – FAM.

Danielly das Graças Belarmino, Centro Universitário UNA

Acadêmica de Nutrição pelo Centro Universitário UNA, Bom Despacho-MG.

Published

2025-10-17

How to Cite

Silva, P. N. da, Leite, M. V. O. D., Ciulla, G. A. R., Alemão, Y. de S., Silva, J. da, Alexandrino, R. K. C., … Belarmino, D. das G. (2025). NEURONUTRITION AND DIETARY NEUROMODULATION: HOW THE BRAIN REGULATES HUNGER, COMPULSION, AND BEHAVIOR. Revista Ibero-Americana De Humanidades, Ciências E Educação, 11(10), 2791–2807. https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v11i10.21550