Showing posts with label brain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brain. Show all posts

Everything About Food For Brain

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Here's how to construct an eating plan that can help turn your brain into a lean, mean thinking machine and, not incidentally, help protect against cancer, heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, premature aging, obesity, and other ills.

As a general rule, when strolling the produce aisles, think color. Anything brightly colored is brain food, loaded with vitamins, minerals, and phytochemicals that maintain brain health and enhance mental performance. And if all else fails, just like the ad says, you shudda had a V-8.

PROTEIN:


Contains four calories per gram. Should supply 15 percent of your total calorie intake.

Everything About Food For BrainNeeded to manufacture brain tissue, enzymes, neurotransmitters, and myriad other brain chemicals. Choose 5 ounces (women) to 8 ounces (men) animal protein from lean sources: skinless poultry, lean meats, organ meats; fatty fish such as salmon, herring, tuna, and sardines, plus other seafood; skim and low-fat dairy products. Increase intake of soy protein foods such as calcium-fortified tofu, soy milk, and textured vegetable protein; soy foods contain isoflavones and thousands of other beneficial compounds animal foods lack.

CARBOHYDRATES:


Contain four calories per gram. Should supply 65 percent of calories.

Vegetables and fruit are packed with antioxidant vitamins and thousands of other powerful antioxidants, minerals, and fiber. Tank up on dark leafy greens; cruciferous vegetables (broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, kale); red/yellow/orange vegetables such as tomatoes, carrots, summer and winter squash; fruits such as berries, cherries, apples, apricots, oranges, grapefruit, red grapes, peaches.

The government recommends that you get at least five servings of fruits and vegetables per day.
That's pathetic, say many researchers — yet more than two-thirds of Americans, especially meast-and-potatoes-and-pizza men — don't even get that. (Real, smart men do eat salad.) Experts urge you to eat as much and as many fruits and veggles as you can pack in — 10 servings if you want. Watery, crunchy fruits/veggies are very low in calories; eat ad lib. (A serving is one whole fruit or vegetable, a half-cup cooked or 1 cup raw greens.)

Grains, starchy vegetables, and legumes are packed with B vitamins, antioxidants, trace minerals, and fiber. Whole-grain breads, cereals, pasta, grains, potatoes, and yams are loaded with energy-boosting, feel-good complex carbohydrates (and some fat-free protein). Complex carbs, digested more slowly than simple sugars, keep blood sugar levels steady and brain energy high for prolonged periods. Refined flour products won't kill you, but even "enriched" versions don't put all the good stuff back, and lack fiber. Get 5 to 11 servings daily (the latter if you're a big guy or female triathlete). A serving equals one slice of bread, one potato, or half a cup of grain or beans.

Table sugar (sucrose) or honey is okay if used sparingly, but it lacks vitamins and minerals; limit to a few teaspoons daily (one Coke has 10 teaspoons!). Avoid corn syrup and high-fructose corn syrup, which raise triglycerides more than sucrose; they're in zillions of prepared foods, including ketchup.

FAT:


Contains nine calories per gram. Current government recommendations call for fat intake to supply no more than 30 percent of calories. But that may not be low enough to keep your brain from clogging up.

"The same low-fat diet that ensures cardiovascular health will ensure brain health," contends cholesterol expert Charles Glueck, M.D. The dietary fat level that reduces or eliminates depression and boosts cognitive performance is a skimpy 10 to 15 percent.

Sounds a bit too austere? Relax. Oregon's William Connor, M.D., contends that a diet supplying no more than 20 percent of calories from fat confers adequate health benefits head to toe.

But 40 percent of that fat should be in the form of essential fatty acids (EFAs), preferably from fatty fish such as salmon, sardines, mackerel, and tuna. And get this — caviar is an excellent source of EFAs. You can take one to two capsules of fish oil daily (a gram of fat each). It's not only the best source of the most beneficial n-3s for the brain, it lowers cholesterol and triglyceride levels, too. Limit saturated fat intake to four to six percent of your overall calories. Avoid hydrogenated fats; they're saturated fats. Use only a microthin smear of low-fat margarine, if you must. (Sorry, butter is still worse.)

The rest of your fat should come from vegetable oils rich in n-3s. To get n-3 fatty acids in a favorable ratio to n-6s, use flaxseed, canola, soy, and walnut oils rather than corn, safflower, or sunflower oils. Throw these oils away, and avoid eating foods containing them. Olive oil has little n-3 but is mostly harmless monosaturated fat; mix with canola oil to flavor salads. Use olive oil cooking spray. Mono-rich peanut oil is okay in small doses, too.

But don't overdo the EFA-rich oils, either. You need no more than two to three teaspoons of EFAs per day.

Assume you'll get half your fat from even low-fat foods. That leaves half you can add as oil. Limit yourself to 20 grams (women) to 25 grams (men) daily.

Remember, dietary cholesterol does not raise blood cholesterol levels in two-thirds of the population, Trouble is, you don't know whether you're a dietary cholesterol "responder" without medical tests. Better to keep cholesterol Intake below 300 mg per day.

Copyright © 1991-2004 Sussex Publishers. All rights reserved.

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Strawberries, Blueberries, Spinach and the Brain

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Strawberries, Blueberries, Spinach and the Brain
Illustration by Lydia Kibiuk, copyright © 2003 Lydia Kibiuk.

Your snack choice is more important than you think. New research indicates that in addition to affecting your waistline, food also can influence your brain. Some diets appear to aid mental functioning while others harm it. Altogether the studies show the importance of diet on mental health and also may have implications for those who suffer from certain brain ailments.

Loathe anything leafy and green? Obsess over cream-filled cupcakes?

Junk food junkies take notice. What you eat does more than influence your gut. It also may affect your brain. Increasing evidence shows that certain fruits and veggies produce brain benefits, while some types of fat appear to cause harm. The new studies are leading to:
  • A better understanding of food's complex actions.
  • The development of diets that may improve brain functions and help prevent or treat brain ailments.

Mentally healthy foods include strawberries, blueberries and spinach, according to some of the work. In one example, researchers fed aging rats the daily equivalent of a pint of strawberries, pint of blueberries or a spinach salad for two months. Compared with aging rats on a regular diet, molecular measures of brain cell communications showed that the supplemented animals had better cell function. They also performed better on a memory test. In addition, preliminary findings indicate that the food possibly may have an effect on Alzheimer's disease (AD), a memory-impairing disorder that hits in old-age. Mice bred to develop AD perform better on a memory task when they receive a blueberry supplement. Their brain cell communication also enhances. Plans to study supplements of the foods in humans are under way.

Researchers surmise that the benefits of these produce items stem, at least in part, from their high antioxidant content. In the brain, antioxidant molecules wage war against troops of molecules, known as free radicals, which can harm brain cells and brain function (see illustration). Many scientists believe that, as we age and during various disease-related circumstances, our internal antioxidant defenses can become overpowered by the free radical force. The antioxidant-rich foods are thought to offer brain protection during these times by providing an extra boost in defense, keeping the free radicals in check.

General diets rich in antioxidants also have benefits. By following a group of people aged 65 and over for about four years, researchers recently found that a diet packed with high levels of the antioxidant, vitamin E, was associated with a lower risk of developing AD in some people.

On the other end of the spectrum, a crop of studies finds evidence that gorging on foods that contain high levels of saturated fat-think french fries and donuts-can hinder brain function. Even though some fat is important for health, many Americans go overboard, especially with the saturated form. Studies indicate that rats kept on a comparable diet, where approximately 40 percent of their daily calories come from saturated fats, perform poorly on tests of memory and learning.

Human studies also report negative effects. In one study researchers examined the food intake of some 5,000 participants. People who ate diets high in saturated fat had an increased risk of dementia.

It's not clear how excessive saturated fat harms the brain, but there are many theories. Some blame its effect on glucose, a sugar that provides energy to the body and brain. While a short-term supply of glucose can help the brain, excess fat may create a situation where brain cells receive a long-term, harmful exposure to glucose. Research on people with diabetes, a disease marked by problems with glucose, fits with this idea. For example, one report found that diabetics perform poorly on memory tests. Other research indicates that excess fat affects certain brain memory molecules. One of the studies on rats found that the high fat diet cut levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and other related molecules in the brain, which are thought to aid the formation of memories.

More research is needed to sort out all the complicated effects of food, but scientists hope eventually to develop specific dietary guidelines that aid brain health. For now, researchers say it can't hurt to eat more fruits and veggies and cut down on saturated fat.

[Explanations to the fig.

One way certain foods may help the brain is by fighting off harmful free radical molecules (A), which roam around anxiously looking to combine with other molecules. Their rush for a mate is thought to cause cell damage or even cell death (B) and contribute to a variety of brain function problems. Researchers believe that foods, such as strawberries, blueberries and spinach, provide the brain with extra platoons of antioxidants. These protective molecules can take the free radicals out of commission, ending their assault.]


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