LOW.CARB DIETS DEPRIVE YOUR BRAIN OF FUEL
Tufts researchers have found that low- carbohydrate diets, such as the popular Atkins Diet, may reduce cognitive ability. Researchers theorized that low-carb diets could have a negative impact on thinking and cognition because the brain doesn’t store glucose, its primaryfuel, but depends on the body’s production of it from carbohydrates in the diet. After only a day or two, even the glucose stored by the body is exhausted and must be replenished by food.
Low-carb diets, however, often restrict dietary carbohydrates to as little as 20 grams a day. The recommended daily allowance (RDA) of carbs is 130 grams, based in part on what the brain needs for fuel. As low-carb diets promise quick weight loss, their other potential effects are often overlooked. Tufts psychology professor Holly A. Taylor, PhD, corresponding author of the new study, which was published in Appetite, says, “Diets can affect more than just weight.
The popular low-carb, no-carb diets have the strongest potential for negative impact on thinking and cognition. The brain needs glucose for energy, and diets low in carbohydrates can be detrimental to learning, memory and thinking.
The Tufts researchers compared 19 women who were allowed to choose a low-carb diet, similar to the Atkins plan, or a reduced-calorie diet recommended by the American Dietetic Association (ADA). Self-selection, to insure the best possible compliance, led to nine on the low-carb diet and 10 picking the ADA plan. The women were tested for long- and short-term memory, spatial memory and visual attention 72 hours before starting the diets, and again 48 hours and one week after going on the diets. Carbohydrates were then reintroduced, and the women’s cognitive abilities were retested at the two- and three- week points.
“Although the study had a modest sample size, the results showed a clear difference in cognitive performance as a function of diet,” Taylor reports.
Those on the low-carb diet suffered a gradual decrease in memory performance and scored slower reaction times on all tests. Previous studies have suggested that lowcarb diets can improve short-term attention span, however, and the low-carb group did outperform the ADA group in attention tests. Neither subjective ratings of hunger nor average weight loss (4.4 pounds) varied between the two groups.
The good news for low-carb dieters is that cognitive performance improved after carbohydrates were reintroduced to the diets. But long-term adherence to a lowcarb regimen could have negative effects on mental skills for at least as long as the diet lasts. As Tylor and colleagues conclude, The macronutrient makeup of various weight-loss regimens is likely to have both positive and negative effects on our ability to think, attend and remember.”
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