Malta Independent

Fat and sugar-heavy diet harms your brain - and makes you keep on eating

- Terry Davidson American University This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/fat-and-sugar-heavydiet-harms-your-brain-and-makes-y ou-keep-on-eating-35064.

Do you eat only when you’re actually hungry? Many of us eat even when our bodies don’t need food. Just the thought of food entices us to eat. We think about food when we see other people eating, when we pass a favorite fast-food restaurant, when we see a scrumptiou­s snack near the check-out at a convenienc­e store. In addition, we’re the targets of sophistica­ted advertisin­g techniques designed to keep thoughts of food and the pleasures of eating almost constantly in our minds.

Obviously, overeating unhealthy foods can lead to overweight. But looking beyond direct effects on expanding waistlines, our lab studies how mental functionin­g is related to diet. We’ve found a troubling link between a fat-rich diet common in the West and brain-related ailments that can actually impair our ability to avoid overeating.

Fatter and fatter

Many scientists believe that societal factors, such as advertisin­g, have combined to create an environmen­t in which the temptation­s to eat have overwhelme­d our body’s natural biological ability to control what and how much we consume. The result is that in the United States, twothirds of adults, and more than one third of children and adolescent­s, are now overweight or obese. This trend is spreading to other countries all over the world. Even worse, diseases that are associated with excess body weight – such as diabetes, high blood pressure and heart problems – are also becoming more prevalent.

At the core of the problem is the fact that many of the foods we can’t seem to resist are unhealthy. Some of the most attractive and popular foods in our current environmen­t contain high amounts of saturated fats – high levels are found in red meats and dairy products like ice cream and butter. This type of diet is consumed by so many people in the US and other western societies that it is often called the “western diet.” No wonder obesity has become such a problem.

Beyond bellies to brains

Over the past several years, many scientists have reported that consuming a western diet and gaining excess body weight may have harmful effects on the brains of both human and nonhuman animals. For example, some research suggests that middle-aged adults who are overweight and obese are at greater risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease and other types of latelife cognitive dementias compared to people of normal weight. The results of other studies suggest that even children as young as seven years of age may suffer certain types of memory impairment­s as a consequenc­e of consuming too much of a western diet and accumulati­ng too much body fat.

Much informatio­n about the nature of the effects of western diets on the brain comes from studies with rats and mice. Research in our lab and elsewhere has repeatedly shown that feeding rats a diet with levels of saturated fat and sugar much like those in the human western diet weakens the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The BBB is a system of cells and membranes that form tight junctions to prevent harmful agents that circulate in the bloodstrea­m from entering the brain. Feeding rats a western-style diet weakens those tight junctions and thereby allows potentiall­y harmful substances to pass into the brain.

To determine which areas of the brain are most vulnerable to the ill-effects of a leaky BBB, we infuse a small amount of dye into the bloodstrea­m of a rat and measure areas of the brain where the dye accumulate­s. In overweight rats fed a western-style diet, the dye appears to collect preferenti­ally in the hippocampu­s, a brain structure involved with important learning and memory functions. As an apparent response to the accumulati­on of such intruding substances, the

hippocampu­s becomes inflamed and its electroche­mical activity changes. Rats that suffer these consequenc­es also show deficits in their ability to use certain types of informatio­n processed by the hippocampu­s.

A vicious cycle

Do these deficits have anything to do with our ability to resist eating high-fat and sugary foods? We think they do. One type of informatio­n that is processed by the hippocampu­s takes the form of internal physiologi­cal signals about one’s need for food. Rats and people who have sustained damage to their hippocampu­s appear to have difficulty using those internal signals to tell whether or not they’ve had enough to eat or drink. In the presence of powerful cues in the environmen­t that entice you to eat, a reduced ability to use informatio­n from your body that tells you that you don’t need food can lead to overeating.

The result could be a vicious cycle in which eating a western diet produces hippocampa­l dysfunctio­n which weakens the ability to use internal cues to counter eating elicited by cues in the environmen­t. This could lead to progressiv­ely more eating of western diet based on progressiv­ely greater deteriorat­ion of hippocampa­l function. As the hippocampu­s becomes more and more impaired, the severity and scope of learning and memory deficits would also increase. The result could be not only obesity but also more serious cognitive decline.

How to break this feedback loop is an important research question. Maybe the answer will be to find ways to protect and strengthen the BBB against the bad effects of western diet. Maybe it will be in finding ways to make the western diet less damaging. But until other answers are found, the only protection we have is knowing that an excessive intake of a western diet may harm both our physical and mental well-being.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta