memory

Brain Health: "a fine line between moderate and binge drinking"

A study published in the November 8 issue of Neuroscience looked at the effects of drinking alcohol on the brain of rats. According to the study abstract, the rats “drinking regime resulted in an average blood alcohol concentration of approximately 0.08%,” the legal driving limit in the U.S. According to ScienceDaily:

The researchers discovered that at this level of intoxication in rats -- comparable to about 3-4 drinks for women and five drinks for men -- the number of nerve cells in the hippocampus of the brain were reduced by nearly 40 percent compared to those in the abstinent group of rodents. The hippocampus is a part of the brain where the new neurons are made and is also known to be necessary for some types of new learning.

First author M. L. Anderson commented to ScienceDaily:

Moderate drinking can become binge drinking without the person realizing it. In the short term there may not be any noticeable motor skills or overall functioning problems, but in the long term this type of behavior could have an adverse effect on learning and memory.

The study was conducted by researchers working in Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience in the Department of Psychology at Rutgers University and at the University of Jyvaskyla in Finland.

Cognitive decline in obesity

Obesity (a BMI of 30 or more) increases problems with memory and thinking, a condition also known as cognitive decline. Pauline Anderson, writing for Medscape Neurology MedPulseNews, notes:

It has been known for some time that obese patients face relatively fast cognitive decline, but recent research has suggested that if such patients are metabolically healthy, either naturally or through the use of medications, they may escape some adverse health effects…

However, a new study published in the August 21 issue of Neurology shows otherwise. While cognitive decline occurs faster in those with metabolic abnormalities such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol, the decline in cognitive function 10 years following baseline assessments were similar in the metabolically normal and abnormal groups. Anderson quotes study author Dr. Archana Singh-Manoux: 

We know that lower BMI is protective; that if your BMI is under 25, you have the slowest cognitive decline. So lower BMI is a good idea, but this notion that you can have a high BMI, and if your metabolic health is good, you'd be okay doesn't seem to be supported in our paper.

Related Posts

Obesity in adults linked to cognitive dysfunction

iStock_000016309930Small.jpg

Duke University and CDC predict 42% of Americans will be obese by 2030. The impact on the nation's health (and economy) will be significant. Obesity is associated with many modern diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, metabolic syndrome, and sleep apnea. Other associations include migraine headaches, increased brain pressure (pseudotumor cerebri), rheumatoid arthritis, and inflammation of the brain's frontal lobes and hypothalamus.

Obesity is measured using the Body Mass Index (BMI) and is calculated by dividing body weight by the square of the height. As noted by Medscape Neurology, BMI “is the most common means that clinicians use to define obesity.”

Central obesity, obesity of the abdomen, is also harmful to health. The extra adipose tissue collects below the skin (subcutaneous adipose tissue) and around the abdominal organs (visceral adipose tissue). While many of us grew up thinking extra fatty tissue was harmless, it is now understood that the adipose tissue of central obesity represents a “pathogenic tissue compartment” (a compartment of tissue that can make us sick).

In a study published in March 2012 issue of Age and Ageing, Dae Hyun Yoon MD, PhD and associates looked at the whether obesity, as measured by BMI, and central obesity affected brain function.

In 250 patients, 60 years of age or older, the amount abdominal fatty tissue (both visceral and subcutaneous) was measured on an abdominal CT scan and compared to the results on the MMSE-KC, a Korean diagnostic scale similar to the Mini-Mental State Examination that measures cognitive function. The researchers discovered that persons 60-70 years of age with a high BMI or high visceral obesity had significantly more difficulty with memory and thinking. According to Medscape Medical News:

After controlling for age, sex, education, hypertension, and diabetes, high BMI and being in the top tertile for visceral adipose tissue area were significantly associated with poor cognitive performance in those up to age 70 years.

Dr. Yoon explained:

Visceral adipose tissue is more metabolically active than subcutaneous adipose tissue and is thought to have a stronger influence on insulin resistance, among other things. It has long been considered as a pathogenic tissue compartment and this research shows a positive association between visceral adipose tissue area and low cognitive functioning. (emphasis added)

Contrary to popular belief, excess fat does not just sit there; it produces inflammatory substances that affect a variety of bodily functions. The extra fat impacts how the brain works; or, in this situation, doesn’t work.  

Staffan Lindberg MD, PhD, writing in his medical textbook Food and Western Disease: Health and nutrition from an evolutionary perspective, notes that “overweight was extremely rare among hunter-gatherers.” As he shows, increasing evidence is pointing to the ancestral diet as the best model for reclaiming health.

To learn more about the ancestral human diet, consider these Ancestral Diet Resources. Also, take a look at the response in BMI and central obesity of these two dedicated Paleo advocates! (Unconquerable Dave and Diana)

Go Paleo to reduce and then get rid of obesity. Keep your brain sharp.

If you are on a special diet for health reasons, discuss the Paleo diet with your doctor before making changes. Also discuss with your doctor if you have high blood pressure or diabetes since your medications may need to be lowered. Also, if you are on Coumadin or have hemochromatosis, discuss this diet with your doctor before you start.   

John Oró