The New Science on What Ultra-Processed Food Does to Your Brain
Studies are finding links between these foods and changes in how we learn, remember, and feel.
Ultra-processed foods may affect not only our bodies but our brains too.
New research suggests links between ultra-processed foods—such as chips, many cereals, and most packaged snacks at the grocery store—and changes in how we learn, remember, and feel. These foods can act like addictive substances, researchers say, and some scientists are proposing a new mental health condition called “ultra-processed food use disorder.” Diets filled with such foods may raise the risk of mental health and sleep problems.
The science is still early and researchers say there is a lot they don’t know. Not all ultra-processed foods are equal, some scientists say, adding that some might be good for you. A diet high in ultra-processed foods has been linked with obesity, Type 2 diabetes, cancer, and cardiovascular disease, but researchers are still figuring out exactly why, beyond calorie counts and nutrient composition.
Makers of foods such as processed meats and muffins defend their products, and note that there isn’t a consistent, universally accepted definition of ultra-processed food.
“The makers of America’s trusted household brands are committed to protecting access to nutritious, affordable, convenient, and safe food,” said a spokesperson for the Consumer Brands Association, an industry trade group.
Craving ultra-processed foods?
Many ultra-processed foods hit the brain rapidly when we eat them and have a strong effect on its reward system, which is involved in pleasure, motivation, and learning.
Those effects are similar to ones when people use nicotine, alcohol, and other addictive drugs, said Ashley Gearhardt, a professor of psychology at the University of Michigan who is a co-creator of a measure of food addiction.
The New Science on What Ultra-Processed Food Does to Your Brain
“People intensely crave ultra-processed foods and consume them compulsively and find they can’t stop eating them,” she said.
The way foods are produced might partly explain why. To make items such as chips, breakfast cereals, and snack bars, manufacturers often break down the cellular structure of ingredients, stripping them of water and fiber, making them easy to chew, eat, and digest quickly. The components hit our brains fast, which makes the foods more addictive, Gearhardt says.
The combination of high levels of both fat and carbs in many ultra-processed foods is likely another reason why we crave them and have a tough time stopping when we eat them.
Chocolate, ice cream, french fries, pizza, and chips are among the top foods that people report eating in an addictive way, according to Gearhardt’s studies. Many of these are high in refined carbohydrates
and fat, a combination that isn’t typically found in nature. Foods in nature are often high in fat or carbs, but not both.
“Bananas are naturally high in sugar but you eat one and you’re good,” she says.
The snacks study
In a recent study published in the journal Cell Metabolism, researchers primed participants with two different kinds of snacks and saw how their brains later responded to a cue for a high-fat, high-sugar food, which many ultra-processed foods are.
Scans of their brains showed that the participants who ate a high-fat, high-sugar snack for eight weeks had much higher activity in parts of the brain that create dopamine, a neurotransmitter involved in motivation, learning, and expecting and experiencing rewards when they saw a cue telling them to expect another high-sugar, high-fat food.
The New Science on What Ultra-Processed Food Does to Your Brain
People who frequently eat high-fat, high-sugar foods and then see signals of them in the real world likely have a similar response, researchers believe.
“When they see the sign of their favorite fast food place or the packaging of their favorite snack, they have more brain activity and are potentially feeling more craving activity that could make them more likely to consume that food,” said Alexandra DiFeliceantonio, associate director of the Center for Health Behaviors Research at Virginia Tech, who was a co-author of the study.
Scientists were surprised to find that people who had been eating high-fat, high-sugar snacks also had changes in how their brains learn.
While participants were having their brains scanned, the researchers had them do a basic learning task, requiring them to push a button associated with a picture when they heard certain tones. When people who had been eating high-fat, high-sugar snack didn’t get the picture they expected, their brains showed greater activity in parts involved in evaluating situations.
This high-sugar, high-fat diet “is changing something really basic about how we learn,” DiFeliceantonio said.
In a different study, four days of having a breakfast high in saturated fat and added sugar was linked to reductions in performance on some learning and memory tests, according to researchers in Australia. People who had a healthier breakfast didn’t have the performance changes.
Ultra-processed foods and mental health
Mental health is also affected by diet. Several recent studies have found a link between diets high in ultra-processed foods and an increased risk of depression. A large review of research published last month in the journal BMJ found an increased risk of depression, anxiety, and sleep problems with diets high in ultra-processed foods.
Gearhardt and colleagues are proposing a new mental health disorder that they plan to call “ultra-processed food use disorder” or “highly-processed food use disorder” for inclusion in the official guide that psychiatrists and psychologists use to diagnose patients. Symptoms include intense cravings, difficulty cutting down consumption, and withdrawal symptoms like irritability and agitation when people try to reduce their intake.
The New Science on What Ultra-Processed Food Does to Your Brain
One of the main ways diet affects mental health is likely via the gut microbiome, said Felice Jacka, director of the Food & Mood Centre at Deakin University in Australia. The gut microbiome refers to the microbes that live in the digestive tract. It influences immune function, the stress response system, and the production of neurotransmitters like serotonin, all of which affect mental health, Jacka added.
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