Spoonful of Sugar May Curb Stress,
Obesity
ByRita Jenkins
Sweets may decrease production of glucocorticoid,
a stress-related hormone that has been linked
to obesity and decreased immune response,
researchers from the University of Cincinnati
(UC) have found.
"Glucocorticoids are produced
when psychological or physical stressors
activate a part of the brain called the
'stress axis,'" says Yvonne Ulrich-Lai,
PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the department
of psychiatry.
"These hormones help an individual
survive and recover from stress, but have
been linked to increased abdominal obesity
and decreased immune function when produced
in large amounts," she adds.
"Finding another way to affect the
body's response to stress and limit glucocorticoid
production could alleviate some of these
dangerous health effects," Dr. Ulrich-Lai
suggests.
The laboratory findings were presented
on November 15 at the annual Society for
Neuroscience meeting in Washington, DC.
Psychological and Physical Stress
Dr. Ulrich-Lai and a team of researchers
from the department of psychiatry showed
that when laboratory rats chose to eat
or drink sweet snacks their bodies produced
lower levels of glucocorticoid.
"The sweets we are talking about
are not the low-calorie, sugar-substitute
variety," says Dr. Ulrich-Lai. "We
actually found that sugar snacks, not
artificially sweetened snacks, are better
'self-medications' for the two most common
types of stress -- psychological and physical."
Psychological stress could involve such
things as public speaking, being threatened,
or coping with the death of a loved one.
Examples of physical stress are injury,
illness, or prolonged exposure to cold.
No Weight Increase Observed
For the study, researchers gave adult
male rats free access to food and water,
and also offered them a small amount of
either a sugar drink, an artificially
sweetened drink, or water twice a day.
After two weeks, the rats were given
a physical and psychological stress challenge.
Following both types of stress, rats that
had consumed the sugar drink had lower
glucocorticoid levels than those that
drank the water. Those drinking the artificially
sweetened drink showed only slightly reduced
glucocorticoid levels.
Although the researchers were not studying
the health effects of the sweetened drinks,
they did not see a body-weight increase
in the rats consuming the sugar drinks.
The next step will be to determine how
these sweetened drinks are decreasing
glucocorticoid production, notes James
Herman, PhD, co-author, professor and
stress neurobiologist in the department
of psychiatry.
"We need to find out if there are
certain parts of the brain that control
the response to stress," he says,
"then determine if the function of
these brain regions are changed by sugar
snacking."
Copyright 2006 Daily News Central
About The Author
Rita Jenkins is a health journalist for
Daily News Central, an online publication
that delivers breaking news and reliable
health information to consumers, healthcare
providers and industry professionals:
http://www.dailynewscentral.com.