Overeating, poor memory
formation, learning disorders, depression -- all have been linked in
recent research to the over-consumption of sugar. And these linkages
point to a problem that is only beginning to be better understood: what
our chronic intake of added sugar is doing to our brains.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA),
the average American consumes 156 pounds of added sugar per year.
That's five grocery store shelves loaded with 30 or so one pound bags of
sugar each. If you find that hard to believe, that's probably because
sugar is so ubiquitous in our diets that most of us have no idea how
much we're consuming. The Centers for Disease Control
(CDC) puts the amount at 27.5 teaspoons of sugar a day per capita,
which translates to 440 calories -- nearly one quarter of a typical 2000
calorie a day diet.
The key word in all of the stats is "added." While a healthy diet
would contain a significant amount of naturally occurring sugar (in
fruits and grains, for example), the problem is that we're chronically
consuming much more added sugar in processed foods, generally in the
rapidly absorbed form of fructose.
That's an important clarification because our brains need sugar every day to function. Brain
cells require two times the energy needed by all the other cells in the
body; roughly 10% of our total daily energy requirements. This energy
is derived from glucose (blood sugar), the gasoline of our brains. Sugar
is not the brain's enemy -- added sugar is.
Research
indicates that a diet high in added sugar reduces the production of a
brain chemical known as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF).
Without BDNF, our brains can't form new memories and we can't learn (or
remember) much of anything. Levels of BDNF are particularly low in
people with an impaired glucose metabolism--diabetics and
pre-diabetics--and as the amount of BDNF decreases, sugar metabolism
worsens.
In other words, chronically eating added sugar reduces
BDNF, and then the lowered levels of the brain chemical begin
contributing to insulin resistance, which leads to type 2 diabetes and
metabolic syndrome, which eventually leads to a host of other health
problems. Once that happens, your brain and body are in a destructive
cycle that's difficult if not impossible to reverse.
Research has also linked low BDNF levels to depression and dementia. It's possible that low BDNF may turn out to be the smoking gun in these and other diseases, like Alzheimer's,
that tend to appear in clusters in epidemiological studies. More
research is being conducted on this subject, but what seems clear in any
case is that a reduced level of BDNF is bad news for our brains, and
chronic sugar consumption is one of the worst inhibitory culprits.
Other studies have focused on sugar’s role in over-eating. We intuitively know that sugar and obesity are linked, but the exact reason why hasn’t been well understood until recently. Research
has shown that chronic consumption of added sugar dulls the brain’s
mechanism for telling you to stop eating. It does so by reducing
activity in the brain’s anorexigenic oxytocin
system, which is responsible for throwing up the red “full” flag that
prevents you from gorging. When oxytocin cells in the brain are blunted
by over-consumption of sugar, the flag doesn’t work correctly and you
start asking for seconds and thirds, and seeking out snacks at midnight.
What
these and other studies strongly suggest is that most of us are
seriously damaging ourselves with processed foods high in added sugar,
and the damage begins with our brains. Seen in this light, chronic
added-sugar consumption is no less a problem than smoking or alcoholism. And the hard truth is that we may have only begun to see the effects of what the endless sugar avalanche is doing to us.
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/neuronarrative/201204/what-eating-too-much-sugar-does-your-brain
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