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Suzanne Miller
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MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, Mass. -- A new study from the psychology
department at Tufts University shows that when dieters eliminate
carbohydrates from their meals, they performed more poorly on
memory-based tasks than when they reduce calories, but maintain
carbohydrates. When carbohydrates were reintroduced, cognition skills
returned to normal.
"This study demonstrates that the food you eat can have an
immediate impact on cognitive behavior," explains Holly A. Taylor,
professor of psychology at Tufts and corresponding author of the study.
"The popular low-carb, no-carb diets have the strongest potential for
negative impact on thinking and cognition."
Taylor collaborated with Professor Robin Kanarek, former
undergraduate Kara Watts and research associate Kristen D'Anci. The
study, "Low-carbohydrate weight-loss diets. Effects on cognition and
mood," appears in the February 2009 edition of the journal "Appetite."
While the brain uses glucose as its primary fuel, it has no way of
storing it. Rather, the body breaks down carbohydrates into glucose,
which is carried to the brain through the blood stream and used
immediately by nerve cells for energy. Reduced carbohydrate intake
should thus reduce the brain’s source of energy. Therefore, researchers
hypothesized that diets low in carbohydrates would affect cognitive
skills.
Study participants included 19 women ages 22 to 55 who were
allowed to select the diet plan they preferred -- either a
low-carbohydrate diet or a low-calorie, macronutrient balanced diet
recommended by the American Dietetic Association. Nine women chose a
low-carbohydrate diet and 10 selected the low-calorie diet.
"Although the study had a modest sample size, the results showed a
clear difference in cognitive performance as a function of diet," says
Taylor.
The 19 dieters completed five testing sessions that assessed
cognitive skills, including attention, long-term and short-term memory,
and visual attention, and spatial memory. The first session was held
before participants began their diets, the next two sessions occurred
during the first week of the diet, which corresponded to the week when
low-carb dieters eliminated carbohydrates. The final two sessions
occurred in week two and week three of the diets, after carbohydrates
had been reintroduced for those on the low-carb diet.
"The data suggest that after a week of severe carbohydrate
restriction, memory performance, particularly on difficult tasks, is
impaired," Taylor explains.
Low-carb dieters showed a gradual decrease on the memory-related
tasks compared with the low-calorie dieters. Reaction time for those on
the low-carb diet was slower and their visuospatial memory was not as
good as those on the low-calorie diet. However, low-carb dieters
actually responded better than low-calorie dieters during the attention
vigilance task. Researchers note that past studies have shown that
diets high in protein or fat can improve a person's attention in the
short-term, which is consistent with the results in this study.
Participants were also asked about their hunger levels and mood
during each session. The hunger-rating did not vary between
participants on a low-carb diet and those on a low-calorie diet. The
only mood difference between dieters was confusion, which was higher
for low-calorie dieters during the middle of the study.
"Although this study only tracked dieting participants for three
weeks, the data suggest that diets can affect more than just weight,"
says Taylor. "The brain needs glucose for energy and diets low in
carbohydrates can be detrimental to learning, memory, and thinking."
Source: Turfts University.
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