emotional eating — Ageless Brain

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Mood Effects of Low-carb Diets

Posted on the April 1st, 2012 under - Carbohydrates,- Diet,- Emotions, Mood,365 daily messages,Nutrition by

Among those shared with me their weight loss results while on Atkins diet, 347 dieters reported effects beyond weight loss (or its absence):

  • Hunger disappearance or appetite decrease – 178
  • Diabetes improvement – 169
  • Mood improvement, energy level increase – 158
  • Absence of cravings – 149
  • Physicians approval for the diet – 129
  • Joint and muscle improvement – 125
  • Headache disappearance – 121
  • Exercise improvement – 115
  • Muscle gain decrease – 112
  • Fungal/yeast infection disappearance – 111
  • Heartburn, bloating disappearance – 110
  • Thyroid condition improvement – 119

Reported negative results:

  • Cravings for high-carb foods increase – 16
  • Inability to exercise – 15
  • Low-carb foods dissatisfaction – 14

Mood/energy

This particular effect is perhaps the most controversial because it is against the observations, including those conducted in controlled clinical settings, that carbohydrate-rich meals improve mood and energy levels. Apparently, the positive influence reported by the dieters, were due to Atkins diet long-term effects, because during first several days on the diet there were effects consistent with clinical observations on short-term effects of direct intra-gastric infusions of nutrients:

“Hedonic tone was greater and tension lower after the saline and sucrose infusions than after the lipid infusion. From 3 to 3.5 h after ingestion, subjects felt significantly more sleepy after the lipid infusion than they did at these times after the saline infusion, and significantly more dreamy after the lipid infusion than they did after the sucrose infusion. (Physiology & Behavior. 63(4):621-8, 1998)

Another article reporting the influence of nutrients on mood, stress that there were acute and not long term effects:

“Mood improved (a decline in fatigue/dysphoria) following the low-fat/high carb breakfast compared to medium-fat/ medium-carbohydrate or high-fat/low-carbohydrate meals.” (“Acute effects on mood and cognitive performance of breakfasts differing in fat and carbohydrate content. “Appetite. 27(2):151-64, 1996)

The short-term positive effects of high-carb meals can be used, for example, for alleviating the PMS syndrome:

“The experimental carbohydrate intervention significantly decreased self-reported depression, anger, confusion, and carbohydrate craving 90-180 minutes after intake. Memory word recognition was also improved significantly.” (Obstetrics & Gynecology. 86(4 Pt 1):520-8, 1995)

It is interesting that not all of the clinical studies came to the above conclusion. Study conducted by University of Sheffield, demonstrated that meals, particularly when rich in fat, significantly reduced pain perception in healthy human subjects.( Physiology & Behavior. 65(4-5):643-8, 1999)

Carbohydrate craving obese patients do not improve their mood states through ingestion of a carbohydrate-rich snack. (International Journal of Obesity & Related Metabolic Disorders. 21(10):860-4, 1997)

There were no differences in mood between the groups receiving high-carb drink or water during performance of the military tasks. (Aviation Space & Environmental Medicine. 68(5):384-91, 1997)

The ingestion of sucrose failed to have any substantial effect on mood (Physiology & Behavior. 58(3):421-7, 1995)

“The carbohydrate-supplemented group had a greater total energy intake and carbohydrate intake. No significant differences between carbohydrate were observed in remaining psychological, physiological, or performance-related variables.” (International Journal of Sport Nutrition. 5(2):125-35, 1995)

These are rather typical messages:

  • I feel great and my energy level has increased. I don’t feel sluggish anymore.
  • No more mood swings, brain fog, confusion, or depression.
  • I feel healthier, more energy (can keep up with the kids, yeah!) and smarter.
  • I have a much higher energy level as well as a much more pleasant disposition.
  • I have lots of energy and a lot more self esteem.
  • I am sleeping like a teenager, and I had sleep apnea before starting the diet.
  • I sleep better and I have more energy than my 16 year old daughter
  • I’m so infused with energy that I climb the stairs at work without huffing and puffing.
  • My energy had increased! Muscle tone had improved even though I wasn’t going to the gym.
  • When I am eating according to program I feel so much better, sleep better and have more energy
  • After the first 3 days the increase in energy was unbelievable, the mental fog and Monday morning blues were gone.
  • I have more energy, not so tired anymore, and feel like I’m in control of my appetite.
  • I have had a sense of inner peace that I simply can’t explain.
  • My mood swings have lifted and I’m a much happier person overall.
  • I felt better, had more energy, no more brain-fog and I did not feel tired and worn out at the end of the day.

Brain Rewards: Endorphins

Posted on the March 31st, 2012 under - Emotions, Mood,- Endorphins,365 daily messages,Brain Basics by

Message:  Next time you crave anything, ask yourself “What is it I really need? A glass of water? A walk? A hug?” Buying fresh flowers can be a better answer than a bowl of Rocky Road. Exercise, go to sauna, take a cold shower, invest in a massage device, buy a vail of perfume, enjoy a book… Try periodic fasts. After resuming eating, your taste buds will be satisfied with lesser taste intensity thus reducing the taste influence on the body weight set point.

Reward: it can be not about food

“Something is wanted — either a constitution or a piece of sturgeon under horseradish sauce.” M.E. Saltykov-Schedrin (19th Century)

In the late 50s, the classic experiments by Dr. Olds shook the world. He implanted electrodes into certain regions of rat brains and taught the rats how to press lever to stimulate these regions with weak electric currents. Rats stopped doing anything but pressing the lever till their death from complete starvation. The Positive Reward theory was born. It turned out that anything pleasurable in life did related to these “Centers of Pleasure” — sex, alcohol, drugs of abuse — all that mankind has invented in its hedonic journey, were but attempts to stimulate these brain regions.

We know that eating will produce a pleasant sensation so often we eat even though all we need is comfort. The truth is, exercise, sauna, cold shower, massage, pleasant odors, and mental efforts (workoholism is real!) — all increase Endorphin level while only eating, especially when your body does not need it, will cause extra pounds of fat to collect in your body’s store.

“A mechanism for opiate [e.g. endorphin] mediation of food intake was postulated. It starts with a feeding initiating signal, which produces activation of the receptors, thereby inducing eating. Eating produces a circular reaction starting with hedonic input from the eating [process]. This, in turn, produces reward, which causes further eating, completing the circle” [1].
Fasting can be as rewarding

The tricky thing with endorphins is that there are pairs of releasers resembling a thesaurus’ antonyms: exercise does the same os its antonym sleep, pleasure goes together with pain, local blood flow increase does the same to endorphin release as the local lack of oxygen. The eating-fasting pair also exists. Many people reported elation when they skipped breakfasts. Religeous fasters experience euforia.

“Severe food restriction produces opiate activity, which is reinforcing. Feeding interrupts the opiate activity and, thus, produces withdrawal. Not eating, therefore, is rewarding.” [2].

Sources

  1. Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 18:369; 1992
  2. Appetite 19:1-13; 1992

Read also: A theory of acupuncture, spinal cord, and endorphins

Foods that heal, foods that harm

Posted on the March 23rd, 2012 under - Foods for the Brain,365 daily messages by

Foods for the brain and mind (resources)