The ultimate reason we eat is to achieve
good health and retain it. Good health also suggests being in good
mental state; because, as psychiatrists note, there is no good health
without mental health.
When we eat good foods, our bodies get
nourished from the head down. On the other hand, wrong foods can affect
the way our brain works.
Scientists
say our brains need sugar every day to function, as brain cells require
two
times the energy needed by all the other cells in the body –
roughly 10 per cent of our total daily energy requirements.
This energy is derived from glucose
(blood sugar), the gasoline of our brains, scientists say. In other
words, sugar is not the brain’s enemy; rather, added sugar in foods is.
Research indicates that a diet high in
added sugar reduces the production of a brain chemical known as
Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor. Without BDNF, they note, 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 such as diabetics and pre-diabetics; and as the
amount of BDNF decreases, sugar metabolism worsens.
So, what foods are likely to injure your brain? These ones…
Sugary products
The list is endless, and they include
biscuits, canned and bottled drinks, canned fruits in syrups, sweetened
‘fruit’ juices, dissolvable powdered drinks, candies (sweets), cakes,
dried fruits, jams and other sweetened spreads, energy bars, milk
shakes, etc.
Experts say it isn’t that you don’t eat
any of these foods at all; what they are concerned about is their
percentage to the content of your entire daily meal intake, and also if
your entire meal chain revolves around these foods.
A group of researchers, led by the
University of California Los Angeles biology professor, Fernando
Gomez-Pinilla, discovered that bingeing on soft drinks, sweets and
sugary snacks for as little as six weeks may impair brain function.
The study shows that a diet high in fructose (sugar) slows down the brain, and hampers memory and learning.
Gomez-Pinilla says, “Our findings
illustrate that what you eat affects how you think. Eating a
high-fructose diet over the long term alters your brain’s ability to
learn and remember information.”
Scientists regularly warn that sugar
harms the body through its role in diabetes, obesity and liver problems.
A study published in Psychology Today states that overeating,
poor memory formation, learning disorders and depression have all been
linked to too much consumption of sugar.
So, instead of feasting on sugary snacks, try wholesome fruits.
Junk foods
As far as some people are concerned,
patronising fast food outlets is status symbol. But scientists say the
bad fats in junk foods can actually clog up the brain and interfere with
the way it sends messages. The effects are even worse in growing
children, they warn.
A study published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
states that the IQs of children who ate fatty, sugary, processed foods
appeared to suffer years later, while the IQs of those who ate healthy
foods improved.
Again, researcher, Dr. Alex Richardson,
of the University Laboratory of Physiology in Oxford and co-director of
the Food and Behaviour Research Charity, says trans fats displace
healthy fats in the brain.
She warns, “Every time children eat
crisps, biscuits or cakes, they are filling themselves with what are
essentially toxic fats. There are no health benefits to these
hydrogenated fats, yet they are all that some children and adults are
eating.
“They are replacing the essential fats
that would make their brain and body work properly with ones that are
clogging up the machinery. In layman’s terms, the brain gets thicker,”
Richardson says.
Fried foods
Besides the fact that regularly eating
fried foods can give men aggressive prostate cancer, scientists warn
that their effects on brain function are as terrible.
A study by researchers at the University of the Basque in Spain, published in the journal Food Chemistry,
reveals that compounds released from common cooking oils significantly
increase the risk of neurologic degenerative diseases and a variety of
different cancers. They conclude that toxic compounds from fried foods
cause cancer and deteriorate brain health.
Foods such as French fries, crispy fried shrimp and classic fried chicken, among numerous others, could only fry your brain.
In the United States, for instance, many
schools have cut out fried foods in the café, all in a bid to help
kiddies’ brain power. Instead, they serve baked chicken, baked chicken
wraps, strawberries, peaches, sweet potatoes, carrots and kale.
Experts also recommend alternate food preparation methods such as roasting, steaming and broiling.
Salty foods
Again, scientists say too much salt and
too little exercise are hard on the heart. However, new research
suggests that they can be hard on the brain, too.
A three-year study of more than 1,200
people, led by Carol Greenwood, a nutrition scientist and interim
director of the Baycrest Kunin-Lunenfeld Applied and Evaluative Research
in Toronto, has linked a salty diet and sedentary lifestyle to
cognitive decline in old age.
In fact, scientists say salt affects your brain the same way hard drugs do!
Of course, we don’t cut off salt from our
diets totally; rather, what we need is a balance between things. A
physician, Dr. Louise Chang, notes that the iodine in iodised salt helps
the body make thyroid hormone, which is critical to an infant’s brain
development.
So, a little salt is essential to good health.
The bottom line
Eat your foods as naturally as possible.
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