Nutritional psychiatry: Your brain on food
Think about it. Your brain is always
“on.” It takes care of your thoughts and movements, your breathing and
heartbeat, your senses — it works hard 24/7, even while you’re asleep. This
means your brain requires a constant supply of fuel. That “fuel” comes from the
foods you eat — and what’s in that fuel makes all the difference. Put simply,
what you eat directly affects the structure and function of your brain and,
ultimately, your mood.
Like an expensive car, your brain
functions best when it gets only premium fuel. Eating high-quality foods that
contain lots of vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants nourishes the brain and protects
it from oxidative stress — the “waste” (free radicals) produced when the body
uses oxygen, which can damage cells.
Unfortunately, just like an
expensive car, your brain can be damaged if you ingest anything other than
premium fuel. If substances from “low-premium” fuel (such as what you get from
processed or refined foods) get to the brain, it has little ability to get rid
of them. Diets high in refined sugars, for example, are harmful to the brain.
In addition to worsening your body’s regulation of insulin, they also promote
inflammation and oxidative stress. Multiple studies have found a correlation
between a diet high in refined sugars and impaired brain function — and even a
worsening of symptoms of mood disorders, such as depression.
It makes sense. If your brain is
deprived of good-quality nutrition, or if free radicals or damaging
inflammatory cells are circulating within the brain’s enclosed space, further
contributing to brain tissue injury, consequences are to be expected. What’s
interesting is that for many years, the medical field did not fully acknowledge
the connection between mood and food.
Today, fortunately, the burgeoning
field of nutritional psychiatry is finding there are many consequences and
correlations between not only what you eat, how you feel, and how you
ultimately behave, but also the kinds of bacteria that live in your gut.
How
the foods you eat affect how you feel
Serotonin is a neurotransmitter that
helps regulate sleep and appetite, mediate moods, and inhibit pain. Since about
95% of your serotonin is produced in your gastrointestinal tract, and your
gastrointestinal tract is lined with a hundred million nerve cells, or neurons,
it makes sense that the inner workings of your digestive system don’t just help
you digest food, but also guide your emotions. What’s more, the function of
these neurons — and the production of neurotransmitters like serotonin — is
highly influenced by the billions of “good” bacteria that make up your
intestinal microbiome. These bacteria play an essential role in your health.
They protect the lining of your intestines and ensure they provide a strong
barrier against toxins and “bad” bacteria; they limit inflammation; they
improve how well you absorb nutrients from your food; and they activate neural
pathways that travel directly between the gut and the brain.
Studies have shown that when people
take probiotics (supplements containing the good bacteria), their anxiety
levels, perception of stress, and mental outlook improve, compared with people
who did not take probiotics. Other studies have compared “traditional” diets,
like the Mediterranean diet and the traditional Japanese diet, to a typical
“Western” diet and have shown that the risk of depression is 25% to 35% lower
in those who eat a traditional diet. Scientists account for this difference
because these traditional diets tend to be high in vegetables, fruits,
unprocessed grains, and fish and seafood, and to contain only modest amounts of
lean meats and dairy. They are also void of processed and refined foods and
sugars, which are staples of the “Western” dietary pattern. In addition, many
of these unprocessed foods are fermented, and therefore act as natural
probiotics. Fermentation uses bacteria and yeast to convert sugar in food to
carbon dioxide, alcohol, and lactic acid. It is used to protect food from
spoiling and can add a pleasant taste and texture.
This may sound implausible to you,
but the notion that good bacteria not only influence what your gut digests and
absorbs, but that they also affect the degree of inflammation throughout your
body, as well as your mood and energy level, is gaining traction among
researchers. The results so far have been quite amazing.
What
does this mean for you?
Start paying attention to how eating
different foods makes you feel — not just in the moment, but the next day. Try
eating a “clean” diet for two to three weeks — that means cutting out all processed
foods and sugar. You also might want to try going dairy-free — and some people
even feel that they feel better when their diets are grain-free. See how you
feel. Then slowly introduce foods back into your diet, one by one, and see how
you feel.
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