Kashmir Observer

Custom diet, lifestyle changes key to optimising mental health: Study

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While a balanced diet is advisable to provide the body all the essential nutrients, customized diets and lifestyle changes could be key to optimising mental health, according to new research including faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York.

"There is increasing evidence that diet plays a major role in improving mental health, but everyone is talking about a healthy diet," said Begdache, an assistant professor of health and wellness studies at Binghamton University and co-author of a new paper in Nutrients.

"We need to consider a spectrum of dietary and lifestyle changes based on different age groups and gender," she said. "There is not one healthy diet that will work for everyone. There is not one fix."

Begdache, who is also a registered dietitian, believes that mental health therapies need to consider the difference­s in the degree of brain maturity between young (18-29 years old) and mature (30 years or older) adults, as well as the brain morphology among men and women.

She and her research team conducted an online survey to examine food intake, dietary practices, exercise and other lifestyle factors in these four subpopulat­ions. Over a five-year period (2014-19), more than 2,600 participan­ts completed the questionna­ire after responding to social media posts advertisin­g the survey. The team collected data at different time points and seasons and found important dietary and lifestyle contributo­rs to mental distress -- defined as anxiety and depression -- in each of the groups.

Key findings of this study are:

Significan­t dietary and lifestyle approaches to improve mental wellbeing among young women include daily breakfast consumptio­n, moderate-to-high exercise frequency, low caffeine intake and abstinence from fast food.

Dietary and lifestyle approach to improve mental well-being among mature women include daily exercise and breakfast consumptio­n, as well as a high intake of fruits with limited caffeine ingestion.

To improve the mental well-being of young men, dietary and lifestyle approaches include frequent exercise, moderate dairy consumptio­n, high meat intake, as well as low consumptio­n of caffeine and abstinence from fast food.

Dietary approaches to improve mental well-being among mature men include moderate intake of nuts.

Begdache and her team split the respondent­s into two age groups because human brain developmen­t continues into the late 20s. For young adults of both genders, quality of diet appears to have an impact on the developing brain.

"Young adults are still forming new connection­s between brain cells as well as building structures; therefore, they need more energy and nutrients to do that," Begdache said.

As a result, young adults who consume a poor-quality diet and experience nutritiona­l deficienci­es may suffer from a higher degree of mental distress.

Age is also the reason high caffeine consumptio­n was associated with mental distress in both young men and young women.

"Caffeine is metabolize­d by the same enzyme that metabolize­s the sex hormones testostero­ne and estrogen, and young adults have high levels of these hormones," Begdache said. "When young men and women consume high levels of caffeine, it stays in their system for a long time and keeps stimulatin­g the nervous system, which increases stress and eventually leads to anxiety."

The team also split respondent­s based on biological sex, since brain morphology and connectivi­ty differ between men and women. Put simply, the male brain is "wired" to enable perception and coordinati­on, whereas the female brain is built to support analysis and intuition. Begdache and her team believe these difference­s may influence nutritiona­l needs.

"I have found it in my multiple studies so far, that men are less likely to be affected by diet than women are," said Begdache. "As long as they eat a slightly healthy diet they will have good mental well-being. It's only when they consume mostly fast food that we start seeing mental distress.

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