PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Marriage, emotional support may protect against obesity through brain-gut connection, study finds

Novel research reveals supportive relationships influence weight through oxytocin pathways linking brain, gut microbiome and eating behaviors

2025-12-04
(Press-News.org) Strong social relationships, particularly high-quality marriages, may help protect against obesity by influencing a complex communication system between the brain and gut, according to new research by UCLA Health. 

The study, published in the journal Gut Microbes, is the first to demonstrate how social bonds influence weight and eating behaviors through an integrated pathway involving brain function, metabolism and the hormone oxytocin, sometimes referred to as “the love hormone.”  

The findings suggest that the quality of relationships may be just as important to physical health as traditional risk factors like exercise and diet 

“We've known for years that social relationships impact health, with supportive connections increasing survival rates by up to 50%,” said lead author Dr. Arpana Church, a neuroscientist at UCLA Health. “The biological mechanisms explaining this connection have remained elusive. Our study reveals a novel pathway showing how marriage and emotional support literally get 'under the skin' to influence obesity risk.” 

Nearly 100 participants from the Los Angeles area participated in the study. The participants provided data including marital status, current Body Mass Index (BMI), race, age, sex, diet style and quality and socioeconomic status. Researchers also conducted various tests on the participants including brain imaging while food images were displayed; fecal samples to test for metabolites; blood plasma tests to measure oxytocin levels; and clinical and behavioral evaluations including assessment of their perceived emotional support system.  

The Church lab found that married individuals with higher perceived emotional support had a lower body mass index and exhibited fewer food addiction behaviors compared to married participants with low emotional support. Brain imaging showed these individuals had enhanced activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, which manages cravings and appetite, when viewing food images. Conversely, unmarried people with and without strong emotional support did not show the same brain patterns, potentially due to more diverse and less consistent social support networks. 

Social support also had significant changes in gut metabolism. Those with stronger support showed beneficial changes in tryptophan metabolites, which are compounds produced by gut bacteria that regulate inflammation, immune function, energy balance and brain health. These metabolites are also involved in producing serotonin and other compounds that can influence mood, social behavior and metabolism. 

Central to these findings is the hormone oxytocin. Married participants with strong emotional support showed higher levels of oxytocin levels compared to unmarried individuals. Church said their findings suggest oxytocin may act as a biological messenger that simultaneously enhances brain regions involved in self-control while promoting healthier gut metabolic profiles.  

“Think of oxytocin as a conductor orchestrating a symphony between the brain and gut,” said Church. “It strengthens the brain's ability to resist food cravings while promoting beneficial metabolic processes in the gut, both of which help maintain healthy weight.” 

The research also challenges oversimplified views about marriage and weight. The benefits relating to self-control, metabolism and oxytocin levels were more pronounced among married participants who endorsed greater emotional support. 

“Marriage may serve as a training ground for self-control,” said Church. “Maintaining a long-term partnership requires consistently overriding destructive impulses and aligning with long-term goals, which may strengthen the same brain circuits involved in managing eating behavior.” 

Church said the study opens potential avenues for obesity prevention and treatment by incorporating the need to build strong social relationships alongside a healthy diet and exercise.  

“These results underscore the critical importance of building long-lasting, positive, and stable relationships to promote overall health,” Church said. “Social connections aren't just emotionally fulfilling; they're biologically embedded in our health.” 

The authors noted several limitations. The study captured data at a single point in time and cannot definitively establish cause-and-effect relationships, Church said. Additionally, most participants were overweight or obese, and married participants tended to be older. Future research with larger, more diverse samples and longitudinal designs is needed to confirm these findings and better understand the mechanisms involved.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

High-speed all-optical neural networks empowered spatiotemporal mode multiplexing

2025-12-04
In high-speed optical communications, traditional orbital angular momentum (OAM) multiplexing systems face fundamental limitations, including exponentially increasing spatial-domain complexity, aggravated modal crosstalk, and strong dependence on continuous-wave lasers. These challenges hinder scalability and robustness in complex environments.   To address this, a research team led by Professor Fu Feng and Professor Xiaocong Yuan from Zhejiang Lab has developed a novel OAM-based spatiotemporal multiplexing (OAM-STM) architecture. This approach couples pulsed OAM beams with a diffractive deep neural ...

High-energy-density barocaloric material could enable smaller, lighter solid-state cooling devices

2025-12-04
A collaborated research team from the Institute of Solid State Physics, the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, has discovered a high-energy-density barocaloric effect in the plastic superionic conductor Ag₂Te₁₋ₓSₓ.  "This material shows a volumetric barocaloric performance far beyond that of most known inorganic materials," said the Prof. TONG Peng, who led the team, "Its high energy density makes it well-suited for smaller and lighter cooling devices." The findings were published online in Advanced Functional Materials. Modern refrigeration mainly relies on vapor-compression systems, ...

Progresses on damped wave equations: Multi-wave Stability from partially degenerate flux

2025-12-04
The study of large-time behavior of solutions to partial differential equations is a fundamental pursuit in mathematical analysis, with profound implications for physics and engineering. It addresses a core question: regardless of the initial data, will the solutions eventually settle into a simple, predictable pattern? Answering this question is crucial for verifying the long-term validity of mathematical models and predicting final, stable states. Asymptotic states—such as shock waves, rarefaction waves, and contact waves—are universal patterns that serve ...

First discoveries from new Subaru Telescope program

2025-12-04
Astronomers using the Subaru Telescope in Hawaiʻi have discovered a massive planet and a brown dwarf orbiting distant stars. The discoveries are the first results from OASIS (Observing Accelerators with SCExAO Imaging Survey), which combines space-based measurements with the Subaru Telescope’s advanced imaging to find hidden worlds. These discoveries in turn enable NASA’s upcoming Roman Space Telescope to test critical technologies for imaging Earth-like planets. Only about 1% of stars host massive planets and brown ...

Ultrafast laser shock straining in chiral chain 2D materials: Mold topology‑controlled anisotropic deformation

2025-12-04
As 2D materials race toward flexible electronics, precisely tailoring their strain fields without cracking crystals remains a grand challenge. Now, a Purdue team led by Prof. Gary J. Cheng and Prof. Wenzhuo Wu demonstrates the first laser-shock imprinting (LSI) on chiral-chain tellurene, revealing orientation-dependent deformation that retains single-crystal integrity while generating dense dislocation networks—offering a universal route for nanoscale strain engineering of anisotropic 2D systems. Why LSI on Tellurene Matters Ultrafast & High-Resolution: 5-ns, 0.4 GW cm-2 pulse delivers smooth 3-D nanoshaping with sub-micron feature control. Orientation-Sensitive ...

Socially aware AI helps autonomous vehicles weave through crowds without collisions

2025-12-04
Researchers from Tongji University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University have developed a socially aware prediction-to-control pipeline that lets autonomous vehicles safely navigate dense crowds by anticipating multiple ways pedestrians might move. Instead of betting on a single forecast, their system combines a Social GAN trajectory predictor with a real-time Model Predictive Control (MPC) planner, treating each predicted path as a moving obstacle. In dynamic crowd simulations, the integrated Social GAN+MPC controller achieved zero safety violations and maintained ...

KAIST unveils cause of performance degradation in electric vehicle high-nickel batteries: "added with good intentions​

2025-12-04
High-nickel batteries, which are high-energy lithium-ion batteries primarily used in electric vehicles, offer high energy density but suffer from rapid performance degradation. A research team from KAIST has, for the first time globally, identified the fundamental cause of the rapid deterioration (degradation) of high-nickel batteries and proposed a new approach to solve it. KAIST announced on December 3rd  that a research team led by Professor Nam-Soon Choi of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, ...

New ECU tool can help concussion patients manage fear and improve recovery 

2025-12-04
New ECU tool can help concussion patients manage fear and improve recovery    Researchers from Edith Cowan University (ECU) have developed a new tool to evaluate fear avoidance behaviour following a concussion.  The tool, aptly named the Fear Avoidance after Concussion Tool (FACT), consists of a questionnaire that can be completed within five minutes, under the supervision of a health care provider.   ECU Masters by Research student Mr Liam Sherwood noted that if fear avoidant behaviour could be recognised early, ...

People with diabetes face higher risk of sudden cardiac death

2025-12-04
The risk of sudden cardiac death is higher both for people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, according to a large study published in the European Heart Journal [1] today (Thursday). The increase in risk is especially noticeable among younger adults.   Sudden cardiac death is when someone dies suddenly and unexpectedly due to a problem with their heart. It is generally rare in young and seemingly healthy individuals.   The research also shows that people with diabetes have a shorter life expectancy on average, and that a proportion of this reduction is due to sudden cardiac death.   The research was led by Dr Tobias Skjelbred from Copenhagen University ...

Breast density notification increases levels of confusion and anxiousness among women

2025-12-04
Breast density notification is being rolled out across Australia, but evidence suggests that women do not feel more informed by it  Between 25 and 40 percent of women have denser breast tissue which can make it harder for cancers to be detected through a mammogram    New research by experts at the University of Sydney shows that breast density notification is leaving some women confused and anxious about their breast health.  The notification program is designed to advise women that their breast density ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New camera traps snap nearly three times more images of endangered Sumatran tigers than before

Survey: Nearly all Americans not aware midwives provide care beyond pregnancy, birth

Fearless frogs feast on deadly hornets

Fibulin-5: A potential marker for liver fibrosis detection

Development of 'OCTOID,' a soft robot that changes color and moves like an octopus

Marriage, emotional support may protect against obesity through brain-gut connection, study finds

High-speed all-optical neural networks empowered spatiotemporal mode multiplexing

High-energy-density barocaloric material could enable smaller, lighter solid-state cooling devices

Progresses on damped wave equations: Multi-wave Stability from partially degenerate flux

First discoveries from new Subaru Telescope program

Ultrafast laser shock straining in chiral chain 2D materials: Mold topology‑controlled anisotropic deformation

Socially aware AI helps autonomous vehicles weave through crowds without collisions

KAIST unveils cause of performance degradation in electric vehicle high-nickel batteries: "added with good intentions​

New ECU tool can help concussion patients manage fear and improve recovery 

People with diabetes face higher risk of sudden cardiac death

Breast density notification increases levels of confusion and anxiousness among women

K’gari’s world famous lakes could be at risk of drying

Airplane and hospital air is cleaner than you might think

Concern over harmful medical advice from social media influencers

Telling women as part of mammography screening that they have dense breasts may have unintended effects

Note- taking alone or combined with large language models helps students understand and remember better than large language models alone

Astronomers spot one of the largest spinning structures ever found in the Universe

Retinal organoid platform identifies biomarkers and affords genetic testing for retinal disease 

New roadmap reveals how everyday chemicals and microbes interact to fuel antimicrobial resistance

Scientists clarify how much metal in soil is “too much” for people and the environment​

Breakthrough pediatric kidney therapy emerges from U. Iowa research

Breakthrough iron-based magnetic material achieves major reduction in core loss

New design tackles heat challenges in high-power fiber lasers

Rapid fabrication of self-propelled, steerable magnetic microcatheters for precision medicine

Poor kidney health linked to higher levels of Alzheimer’s biomarkers in blood

[Press-News.org] Marriage, emotional support may protect against obesity through brain-gut connection, study finds
Novel research reveals supportive relationships influence weight through oxytocin pathways linking brain, gut microbiome and eating behaviors