This is your brain on sugar: UCLA study shows high-fructose diet sabotages learning, memory / UCLA Newsroom
This is your brain on sugar: UCLA study shows high-fructose diet sabotages learning, memory
Eating more omega-3 fatty acids can offset damage, researchers say
By Elaine Schmidt May 15, 2012
[Correction: Paragraph 5 of this release was changed from an earlier version to reflect that the study focused on fructose generally, not specifically on high-fructose corn syrup; that high-fructose
corn syrup is not necessarily "six times sweeter" than cane sugar;
and that Americans consume approximately 35 pounds of high-fructose
corn syrup per capita annually, not "more than 40 pounds." The
researcher's quote in Paragraph 6 has also been changed slightly to
avoid the implication that the study focused solely on high-fructose
corn syrup.]
Attention, college students cramming
between midterms and finals: Binging on soda and sweets for as little
as six weeks may make you stupid.
A new UCLA rat
study is the first to show how a diet steadily high in fructose slows
the brain, hampering memory and learning — and how omega-3 fatty
acids can counteract the disruption. The peer-reviewed Journal of
Physiology publishes the findings in its May 15 edition.
"Our
findings illustrate that what you eat affects how you think," said
Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, a professor of neurosurgery at the David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA and a professor of integrative biology and
physiology in the UCLA College of Letters and Science. "Eating a
high-fructose diet over the long term alters your brain's ability to
learn and remember information. But adding omega-3 fatty acids to your
meals can help minimize the damage."
While
earlier research has revealed how fructose harms the body through its
role in diabetes, obesity and fatty liver, this study is the first to
uncover how the sweetener influences the brain.
Sources
of fructose in the Western diet include cane sugar (sucrose) and
high-fructose corn syrup, an inexpensive liquid sweetener. The syrup is
widely added to processed foods, including soft drinks, condiments,
applesauce and baby food. The average American consumes roughly 47
pounds of cane sugar and 35 pounds of high-fructose corn syrup per
year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
"We're less
concerned about naturally occurring fructose in fruits, which also
contain important antioxidants," explained Gomez-Pinilla, who is also a
member of UCLA's Brain Research Institute and Brain Injury Research
Center. "We're more concerned about the fructose in high-fructose corn
syrup, which is added to manufactured food products as a sweetener and
preservative."
Gomez-Pinilla and study co-author
Rahul Agrawal, a UCLA visiting postdoctoral fellow from India,
studied two groups of rats that each consumed a fructose solution as
drinking water for six weeks. The second group also received omega-3
fatty acids in the form of flaxseed oil and docosahexaenoic acid
(DHA), which protects against damage to the synapses — the chemical
connections between brain cells that enable memory and learning.
"DHA
is essential for synaptic function — brain cells' ability to transmit
signals to one another," Gomez-Pinilla said. "This is the mechanism
that makes learning and memory possible. Our bodies can't produce
enough DHA, so it must be supplemented through our diet."
The
animals were fed standard rat chow and trained on a maze twice daily
for five days before starting the experimental diet. The UCLA team
tested how well the rats were able to navigate the maze, which
contained numerous holes but only one exit. The scientists placed visual
landmarks in the maze to help the rats learn and remember the way.
Six weeks later, the researchers tested the rats' ability to recall the route and escape the maze. What they saw surprised them.
"The
second group of rats navigated the maze much faster than the rats
that did not receive omega-3 fatty acids," Gomez-Pinilla said. "The
DHA-deprived animals were slower, and their brains showed a decline in
synaptic activity. Their brain cells had trouble signaling each other,
disrupting the rats' ability to think clearly and recall the route
they'd learned six weeks earlier."
The
DHA-deprived rats also developed signs of resistance to insulin, a
hormone that controls blood sugar and regulates synaptic function in
the brain. A closer look at the rats' brain tissue suggested that
insulin had lost much of its power to influence the brain cells.
"Because
insulin can penetrate the blood–brain barrier, the hormone may signal
neurons to trigger reactions that disrupt learning and cause memory
loss," Gomez-Pinilla said.
He suspects that
fructose is the culprit behind the DHA-deficient rats' brain
dysfunction. Eating too much fructose could block insulin's ability to
regulate how cells use and store sugar for the energy required for
processing thoughts and emotions.
"Insulin is
important in the body for controlling blood sugar, but it may play a
different role in the brain, where insulin appears to disturb memory
and learning," he said. "Our study shows that a high-fructose diet
harms the brain as well as the body. This is something new."
Gomez-Pinilla,
a native of Chile and an exercise enthusiast who practices what he
preaches, advises people to keep fructose intake to a minimum and swap
sugary desserts for fresh berries and Greek yogurt, which he keeps
within arm's reach in a small refrigerator in his office. An occasional
bar of dark chocolate that hasn't been processed with a lot of extra
sweetener is fine too, he said.
Still planning to
throw caution to the wind and indulge in a hot-fudge sundae? Then
also eat foods rich in omega-3 fatty acids, like salmon, walnuts and
flaxseeds, or take a daily DHA capsule. Gomez-Pinilla recommends one
gram of DHA per day.
"Our findings suggest that
consuming DHA regularly protects the brain against fructose's harmful
effects," said Gomez-Pinilla. "It's like saving money in the bank. You
want to build a reserve for your brain to tap when it requires extra
fuel to fight off future diseases."
The UCLA
study was funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke. Gomez-Pinilla's lab will next examine the role of diet in
recovery from brain trauma.
The UCLA Department of Neurosurgery
is committed to providing the most comprehensive patient care through
innovative clinical programs in minimally invasive brain and spinal
surgery; neuroendoscopy; neuro-oncology for both adult and pediatric
brain tumors; cerebrovascular surgery; stereotactic radiosurgery for
brain and spinal disorders; surgery for movement disorders such as
Parkinson's disease; and epilepsy surgery. For 20 consecutive years, the
department has been ranked among the top 10 neurosurgery programs in
the nation by U.S. News & World Report.
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