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Smaller subcortical volume relates to greater weight gain in girls with initially healthy weight.

Shana AdiseJonatan Ottino-GonzalezPanteha Hayati RezvanEric KanKyung E RheeMichael I GoranElizabeth R Sowell
Published in: Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.) (2024)
The results suggest a potential phenotype for identifying obesity risk because underlying differences among regions involved in food intake were related to greater weight gain in girls, but not in boys. Importantly, 2 years of weight gain may not be sufficient to alter brain development, highlighting early puberty as a critical time to prevent negative neurological outcomes.
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