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SERIES: The Gut-Brain ConnectionArticle 2 of 4
What happens in four brain regions after one meal?

Signals triggered by a meal do not stop in the gut. They reach several brain regions, each reading the same meal for a different purpose.

A meal changes signaling in the gut first. But the effect does not stay there. Information about stretch, nutrients, and hormones moves up the routes that connect the gut to the brain, and different regions do different things with it.

Four regions stand out. The hypothalamus reads the meal for energy balance and adjusts hunger. The brainstem reads it for internal state, which is where fullness, and sometimes nausea, gets registered. The reward areas read it for value, which is why some foods feel worth more than others. The prefrontal cortex and amygdala read it for what to do next, the difference between a deliberate choice and a reactive one.

This is why the gut-brain frame matters. Food is not just broken down. It is turned into signals that several parts of the nervous system read at once, each for its own job.

The point is coordination. One meal can move several systems at once because the signal is read in several places at once.
One More Thing

The amygdala and the prefrontal cortex receive the same meal signal. Under stress, the amygdala amplifies its response while the prefrontal cortex pulls back. The brain shifts from deliberate eating to reactive eating. Same signal. Different processing priority.

This is what people call emotional eating. It is not a failure of willpower. It is a routing problem. The signal is accurate. Stress changes which brain region processes it first. The information is correct. The hierarchy shifts.

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References3 sources
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    Elsevier
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    Gut feelings: the emerging biology of gut-brain communication.
    Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 12(8)