Food for thought
You are what you eat, and that
includes your brain. So what is the ultimate
mastermind diet?
YOUR brain is the greediest organ in your body, with
some quite specific dietary requirements. So it is
hardly surprising that what you eat can affect how
you think. If you believe the dietary supplement
industry, you could become the next Einstein just by
popping the right combination of pills. Look closer,
however, and it isn't that simple. The savvy
consumer should take talk of brain-boosting diets
with a pinch of low-sodium salt. But if it is
possible to eat your way to genius, it must surely
be worth a try.
First, go to the top of the class by eating
breakfast. The brain is best fuelled by a steady
supply of glucose, and many studies have shown that
skipping breakfast reduces people's performance at
school and at work.
But
it isn't simply a matter of getting some calories
down. According to research published in 2003, kids
breakfasting on fizzy drinks and sugary snacks
performed at the level of an average 70-year-old in
tests of memory and attention. Beans on toast is a
far better combination, as Barbara Stewart from the
University of Ulster, UK, discovered. Toast alone
boosted children's scores on a variety of cognitive
tests, but when the tests got tougher, the breakfast
with the high-protein beans worked best. Beans are
also a good source of fibre, and other research has
shown a link between a high-fibre diet and improved
cognition. If you can't stomach beans before midday,
wholemeal toast with Marmite makes a great
alternative. The yeast extract is packed with B
vitamins, whose brain-boosting powers have been
demonstrated in many studies.
“Junk food is implicated in a slew of
serious mental disorders”
A
smart choice for lunch is omelette and salad. Eggs
are rich in choline, which your body uses to produce
the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Researchers at
Boston University found that when healthy young
adults were given the drug scopolamine, which blocks
acetylcholine receptors in the brain, it
significantly reduced their ability to remember word
pairs. Low levels of acetylcholine are also
associated with Alzheimer's disease, and some
studies suggest that boosting dietary intake may
slow age-related memory loss.
A
salad packed full of antioxidants, including
beta-carotene and vitamins C and E, should also help
keep an ageing brain in tip-top condition by helping
to mop up damaging free radicals. Dwight Tapp and
colleagues from the University of California at
Irvine found that a diet high in antioxidants
improved the cognitive skills of 39 ageing beagles -
proving that you can teach an old dog new tricks.
Round off lunch with a yogurt dessert, and you
should be alert and ready to face the stresses of
the afternoon. That's because yogurt contains the
amino acid tyrosine, needed for the production of
the neurotransmitters dopamine and noradrenalin,
among others. Studies by the US military indicate
that tyrosine becomes depleted when we are under
stress and that supplementing your intake can
improve alertness and memory.
Don't forget to snaffle a snack mid-afternoon, to
maintain your glucose levels. Just make sure you
avoid junk food, and especially highly processed
goodies such as cakes, pastries and biscuits, which
contain trans-fatty acids. These not only pile on
the pounds, but are implicated in a slew of serious
mental disorders, from dyslexia and ADHD (attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder) to autism. Hard
evidence for this is still thin on the ground, but
last year researchers at the annual Society for
Neuroscience meeting in San Diego, California,
reported that rats and mice raised on the rodent
equivalent of junk food struggled to find their way
around a maze, and took longer to remember solutions
to problems they had already solved.
It
seems that some of the damage may be mediated
through triglyceride, a cholesterol-like substance
found at high levels in rodents fed on trans-fats.
When the researchers gave these rats a drug to bring
triglyceride levels down again, the animals'
performance on the memory tasks improved.
Brains are around 60 per cent fat, so if trans-fats
clog up the system, what should you eat to keep it
well oiled? Evidence is mounting in favour of
omega-3 fatty acids, in particular docosahexaenoic
acid or DHA. In other words, your granny was right:
fish is the best brain food. Not only will it feed
and lubricate a developing brain, DHA also seems to
help stave off dementia. Studies published last year
reveal that older mice from a strain genetically
altered to develop Alzheimer's had 70 per cent less
of the amyloid plaques associated with the disease
when fed on a high-DHA diet.
Finally, you could do worse than finish off your
evening meal with strawberries and blueberries. Rats
fed on these fruits have shown improved
coordination, concentration and short-term memory.
And even if they don't work such wonders in people,
they still taste fantastic. So what have you got to
lose?
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