By Olumide T.
Agunbiade
Glucose
is the primary fuel for the human brain, but what happens when the brain is
exposed to the excessive added sugars of the standard global diet?
Elevated
blood glucose damages blood vessels, and this blood vessel damage is the major
cause of vascular diabetes complications, such as retinopathy. The vessels in
the brain can also become damaged by hyperglycemia, and there is evidence that
this damage contributes to a progressive decline in brain function.
Studies
on those who have lived with diabetes for many years have found deficits in
learning, memory, motor speed, and other cognitive functions. Frequent exposure
to high glucose levels likely diminishes mental capacity, as higher HbA1C
levels have been associated with a greater degree of brain shrinkage. Even in
those without diabetes, higher sugar consumption is associated with lower
scores on tests of cognitive function.
These
effects are thought to be due to a combination of hyperglycemia, hypertension,
insulin resistance, and elevated cholesterol associated with diabetes. It is not surprising that type 2
diabetes increases the risk of Alzheimer’s Disease, and that Alzheimer’s has
even been called “type 3 diabetes.”
Sugar’s
harmful effects on the brain don’t only occur in the long term; during a single
instance of hyperglycemia, slowed cognitive function and deficits in attention
and memory have been reported.
Hyperglycemia
also affects mood states; type 2 diabetic patients experienced increased
feelings of sadness and anxiety during acute hyperglycemia. In healthy young people as well, a
brain imaging study has suggested that in a hyperglycemic state, the brain’s
ability to process emotion is compromised.
In addition to the damaging effects on cognition and mood, sugar
also has drug-like-effects in the reward system of the brain.Sugar is a
palatable stimulus with reinforcing effects — having a little stimulates the
desire for more. These reward systems drove early humans toward calorie-rich
foods that would help them survive when food was scarce, but now contribute to
the obesity and diabetes epidemics. Our physical and hormonal satiety signals
seem to be overwhelmed by the sugar-induced reward.
The ability of sugar to produce a powerful reward response was
demonstrated by a study in which rats were allowed to choose between pressing
two levers: one lever gave them access to sugar-sweetened water, and the other
a dose of intravenous cocaine. The rats preferred sugar over cocaine.9 In
humans, high-glycemic foods have been found to activate regions of the
brain associated with the reward response and provoked more intense feelings of
hunger compared
to a low-glycemic version, suggesting that foods that a higher
elevation in blood glucose produces a greater addictive drive in the brain.
In the brain, excess sugar impairs both our cognitive skills and
self-control; throughout the body, excess sugar causes dangerous elevations in
blood glucose and blood vessel damage. Added sugar is a dangerous food, and we
can avoid these dangers by enjoying sweet, fresh fruits in place of refined
sugars.
No comments:
Post a Comment