Brain health: Some damage from high-sugar diets may be irreversible

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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High-sugar diets may irreversibly harm brain Health, animal studies find. Image credit: MirageC/Getty Images
  • There are several Healthy lifestyle choices people can make to help protect their brain Health as they age, such as eating a brain-Healthy diet.
  • Past studies show that certain foods, such as diets with high-fat and high-sodium foods, may also impact future brain Health.
  • A new study found that while switching to a Healthier diet may benefit your brain function, it may not fully reverse cognitive issues caused by eating a high-sugar diet, via analysis of data from animal models.

As we age, it is common for brain Health to slightly decline. For instance, it may be harder to remember things and multitasking may become more difficult.

Previous research shows there are several healthy choices people can make throughout their lives to potentially slow brain aging.

These include being physically active, prioritizing sleep, managing stress, not smoking, staying mentally stimulated, and following a brain-healthy diet, such as the MIND diet.

When it comes to diet, past studies further show that certain foods may also impact future brain health. For example, studies have reported that consuming a high-fat diet may negatively impact memory formation, and consuming too much salt may lead to cognitive impairment.

“Brain health is at the core of wellbeing,” Michael D. Kendig, PhD, senior lecturer in the School of Life Sciences at the University of Technology Sydney in Australia, told Medical News Today. “We now know that diet has a major influence on brain health over the lifespan, with the ability to protect against, or increase the risk of cognitive decline.”

Kendig is the senior author of a new study review in the journal Nutritional Neuroscience, which found that, while switching to a healthier diet may benefit brain function, it may not fully reverse cognitive issues caused by eating a high-sugar diet, via analysis of data from animal models.

For this review, researchers analyzed findings from 27 previous studies using rodent models. The animals were all fed high-fat, high-sugar diets for at least 2 weeks. Some rodents were then placed back on their normal healthy food or continued on the high-fat, high sugar diet.

Researchers waited at least 24 hours before scientists assessed the animals’ cognition status.

“Much of the world now eats a dietary pattern characterized by higher than ideal intake of sugar, sodium, and saturated fat,” Kendig said.

“We know that these diets can impair cognitive function — even after a few days or weeks — but not as much is known about what happens to cognition when a bad diet stops, even though this is happening all the time in day-to-day life when people decide to improve eating habits,” he added.

“This led us to review all the studies on this question in preclinical models [in rats and mice],” Kendig explained.

“Animal models are especially valuable here because in people, multiple aspects of lifestyle are likely to change when someone’s diet improves — perhaps [they] may start exercising more, cut alcohol, and/or generally feel more confident about their ability to look after themselves (self-efficacy). All of these might contribute to improvements in cognition, making it more difficult to isolate the effects of nutrition specifically. The controlled conditions of animal experiments allow us to do this very precisely.”

– Michael D. Kendig, PhD

“Absolutely, and I believe there is a strong translational basis for it,” Ramilevich, who was not involved in the review, commented.

“We already have robust clinical evidence linking high-sugar high-fat diets to structural changes in the human brain. Specifically, an accelerated volume loss in the hippocampus, our primary memory-forming center. Because the fundamental neuroanatomy and metabolic pathways governing memory are conserved between rodents and humans, it stands to reason that our brains share a similar capacity for recovery. There is no clear biological reason to believe human brains are uniquely excluded from the benefits of removing a metabolic insult.”

– Zack Ramilevich, MD

Ramilevich said thatthe ideal next step in this research would be transitioning from animal models to trials in humans.

“Furthermore, the next phase of this research needs greater stratification into different types of fats and sugars, rather than just lumping them together as ‘unhealthy food’,“ he continued.

“Since the current data hints that high-fat diets might actually offer better memory recovery than high-sugar diets, future studies must isolate the specific cognitive impacts of fructose versus glucose, and explicitly separate inflammatory saturated fats from possibly beneficial omega-3 fatty acids to see exactly how they interact with our memory centers,” said Ramilevich.

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