Sweet change our brains: Study
Chocolate bars, crisps and fries - why can't we just ignore them in the supermarket? Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research in Cologne, in collaboration with Yale University, have now shown that foods with a high fat and sugar content change our brain: If we regularly eat even small amounts of them, the brain learns to consume precisely these foods in the future.
Why do we like unhealthy and fattening foods so much? How does this preference develop in the brain?
"Our tendency to eat high-fat and high-sugar foods, the so-called Western diet, could be innate or develop as a result of being overweight. But we think that the brain learns this preference," explains Sharmili Edwin Thanarajah, lead author of the study.
To test this hypothesis, the researchers gave one group of volunteers a small pudding containing a lot of fat and sugar per day for eight weeks in addition to their normal diet.
The other group received a pudding that contained the same number of calories but less fat. The volunteer’s brain activity was measured before and during the eight weeks.
Our brain unconsciously learns to prefer high-fat snacks
The brain's response to high-fat and high-sugar foods was greatly increased in the group that ate the high-sugar and high-fat pudding after eight weeks.
This particularly activated the dopaminergic system, the region in the brain responsible for motivation and reward.
"Our measurements of brain activity showed that the brain rewires itself through the consumption of chips and co. It subconsciously learns to prefer rewarding food. Through these changes in the brain, we will unconsciously always prefer the foods that contain a lot of fat and sugar," explains Marc Tittgemeyer, who led the study.
During the study period, the test persons did not gain more weight than the test persons in the control group and their blood values, such as blood sugar or cholesterol, did not change either.
However, the researchers assume that the preference for sugary foods will continue after the end of the study.
"New connections are made in the brain, and they don't dissolve so quickly. After all, the whole point of learning is that once you learn something, you don't forget it so quickly," explains Marc Tittgemeyer.
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
Related Articles

Fit, cleared, gone: Why a 'normal' ECG didn’t save a 53-year-old neurosurgeon from a sudden heart attack
The sudden death of renowned Nagpur neurosurgeon Dr Chandrashekhar Pakhmode in the early hours of December 31 has sent shockwaves through the medical community and raised troubling questions about how heart attacks can strike even those who appear medically fit.

Kolkata’s air quality slips into ‘very poor’ zone as winter pollution peaks, data shows
Kolkata/IBNS: Kolkata’s air quality has deteriorated sharply this winter, with official monitoring data showing repeated episodes of “very poor” air quality across key parts of the city, even as the issue remains largely absent from political discourse ahead of the West Bengal Assembly elections.

Mumbai to Shanghai in real time: Kokilaben Hospital performs India’s first cross-border Robotic Surgeries!
Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital, Mumbai, has achieved a historic national milestone by successfully performing India’s first international remote robotic surgeries on two patients in Mumbai, with the operating surgeon located in Shanghai—over 5,000 kilometres away.

Village panic after funeral feast: 200 get rabies shots over ‘infected’ buffalo milk raita
Nearly 200 residents of a village in Uttar Pradesh were administered rabies vaccine shots after it emerged that raita—a curd-based Indian dish they had consumed—was prepared using milk from a buffalo that later died after being bitten by a dog.
Latest News

Swiss police rule out terror as deadly fire ravages New Year party at Alps bar

‘Shah Rukh Khan a traitor’: BJP leader slams KKR owner over Bangladeshi player signing

Dakota Johnson sparks dating buzz after cozy dinner with singer Role Model

Army’s Albert Ekka Brigade marks 56th Raising Day with ceremonies in Agartala

