Dictionary Definition
hungriness n : a physiological need for food; the
consequence of foood deprivation [syn: hunger]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
Definition
Hunger is a feeling experienced usually followed by a desire to eat. The often unpleasant feeling originates in the hypothalamus and is released through receptors in the liver. Although an average nourished individual can survive weeks without food intake, the sensation of hunger typically begins after a couple of hours without eating and is generally considered quite uncomfortable. The sensation of hunger can often be alleviated and even mitigated entirely with the consumption of food.Kamala Markandaya, the Indian writer, evokes the
horror and pain of hunger in personal terms:
For hunger is a curious thing; at first it is
with you all the time, waking and sleeping and in your dreams, and
your belly cries out insistently, and there is a gnawing and a pain
as if your very vitals were being devoured, and you must stop it at
any cost and you buy a moment’s respite even while you know and
fear the sequel. Then the pain is no longer sharp but dull, and
this too is with you always, so that you think of food many times a
day and each time a terrible sickness assails you, and because you
know this you try to avoid the thought, but you cannot, it is with
you. Then that too is gone, all pain, all desire, only a great
emptiness is left , like the sky like a well in drought, and it is
now that the strength drains from your limbs and you try to rise
and find you cannot, or to swallow water and your throat is
powerless, and both the swallow and the effort of retaining the
liquid tax you to the uttermost.
Hunger pains
When hunger contractions occur in the stomach, these are called hunger pangs. Hunger pangs usually do not begin until 12 to 24 hours after the last ingestion of food, in starvation. A single hunger contraction lasts about 30 seconds, and pangs continue for around 30-45 minutes, then hunger subsides for around 30-150 minutes. Individual contractions are separated at first, but are almost continuous after a certain amount of time. Hunger contractions are most intense in young, healthy people who have high degrees of gastrointestinal tonus. Periods between contractions increase with old age. After hours of non-consumption, leptin levels drop significantly. These low levels of leptin cause the release of secondary hormone, ghrelin, which in turn reinitiates the feeling of hunger.Some studies have suggested that an increased
production of grehlin may enhance desire towards perceptive food
cues, while an increase in stress may also influence the hormone's
production. These findings support why hunger can prevail under
stressful situations.
Behavioral response
Hunger appears to increase activity and movement in many animals - for example, an experiment on spiders showed increased activity and predation in starved spiders, resulting in larger weight gain. This pattern is seen in many animals, including humans while sleeping. It even occurs in rats with their cerebral cortex or stomachs completely removed. Increased activity on hamster wheels occurred when rats were deprived not only of food, but also water or B vitamins such as thiamine This response may increase the animal's chance of finding food, though it has also been speculated the reaction relieves pressure on the home population.References
External links
- United Nation 2007 report
- Action Against Hunger Giving the most basic Human RIght - The right to food
- Intergovernmental Institution for the use of Micro-algae Spirulina against Malnutrition (IIMSAM)
- Fighting hunger and poverty in Ethiopia (Peter Middlebrook)
- Satiety enhancers in food Scientist Live
- e-learning about Food Security and Hunger from FAO
hungriness in Bulgarian: Глад
hungriness in Catalan: Fam
hungriness in Czech: Hlad
hungriness in Danish: Sult
hungriness in German: Hunger
hungriness in Spanish: hambre
hungriness in Basque: Gose
hungriness in French: Faim
hungriness in Galician: Fame
hungriness in Korean: 배고픔
hungriness in Croatian: Glad
hungriness in Ido: Hungro
hungriness in Indonesian: Kelaparan
hungriness in Italian: Fame
hungriness in Hebrew: רעב
hungriness in Latin: Fames
hungriness in Lithuanian: Alkis
hungriness in Dutch: Honger
hungriness in Polish: Głód
hungriness in Portuguese: Fome
hungriness in Quechua: Yarqay
hungriness in Russian: Голод
hungriness in Sicilian: Fami
hungriness in Slovenian: Lakota
hungriness in Finnish: Nälkä
hungriness in Swedish: Hunger
hungriness in Telugu: ఆకలి
hungriness in Thai: ความหิว
hungriness in Turkish: Açlık
hungriness in Chinese: 饥饿