The Asian Age

‘ Sugar coma’ may slow down your brain: Study

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Melbourne: Do you feel a little sluggish after eating sugar or a big meal? You are probably feeling the effects of a sugar crash, which may slow down your brain function, a study suggests. In the study, participan­ts demonstrat­ed reduced attention and response times after consuming glucose or table sugar, compared to those who consumed fructose ( fruit sugar) or artificial sweetener sucralose ( the placebo). “Our study suggests that the ‘ sugar coma’ — with regards to glucose — is indeed a real phenomenon, where levels of attention seem to decline after consumptio­n of glucose- containing sugar,” Mei Peng, a lecturer at the University of Otago in New Zealand, told “PsyPost”. “In particular, how sugar consumptio­n might change the way our brains work. In the case of sweetness perception, we have evolved to favour this taste,” said Peng. Previous research on glucose ingestion has linked it to improved memory performanc­e. However, studies that examined the effect of glucose on other cognitive processes have led to mixed results. In the latest study published in the journal Physiology & Behavior, 49 individual­s consumed sweetened drinks containing either glucose, sucrose, fructose, or sucralose before completing three cognitive tests. The tests consisted of a simple response time task and a measuremen­t of arithmetic processing. The researcher­s also measured the participan­ts’ blood glucose levels during the testing. They found that participan­ts who had consumed glucose or sucrose tended to perform worse on the cognitive tests than those who had consumed fructose or sucralose.

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