What we have been discovering is that the adolescent brain and that
really means up to the age of twenty four even, far more sensitive
than we would expect or like. Worse is that mature adult judgement
is something that arrives as late as twenty four. This is not a
comforting combination to inflict on anyone.
The bottom line for this item is to discourage the use of sugar as
much as possible. We all know that anyway but we need to be way
more serious with developing brains than anyone ever thought. I
personally think that it needs to be regulated out of our food
processing system as a matter of course. That will not stop usuage
but it will force folks to confront the scale of their consumption.
After all you can simply add sugar to sugar free product and may even
have to.
I like brown sugar with my porridge but then I can see what I am
eating.
Sugar Consumption
in Adolescence Linked With Memory Problems
By Sarah
Le, Epoch Times | October 11, 2014
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1011326-sugar-consumption-in-adolescence-linked-with-memory-problems
LOS ANGELES—A recent
study found a link between sugary beverages consumed during
adolescence and memory problems in rats.
Researchers at the
University of Southern California (USC) gave a total of 76 adolescent
and adult rats free access to a sugary beverage with either plain
sugar or high fructose corn syrup (HFCS). Both of the groups were
given regular water and food, and third control group was given only
food and water.
After about 30 days of
unrestricted access to the sugary beverage, which is the length of
the entire adolescent period of a rat, the animals’ spatial memory
was tested by placing them in a maze. In order to avoid an
unpleasantly bright light and white noise, they had to find the exit
and remember how to get to that exit the next time.
“The animals that
had consumed the sugary beverages during the adolescent period of
development had a harder time learning where that location was, and
later when we tested them after they’d learned it, they had a
harder time remembering where it had previously been,” said Scott
Kanoski, Ph.D., one of the authors of the study and assistant
professor of biological sciences at USC.
“In adolescent rats,
HFCS-55 intake impaired hippocampal-dependent spatial learning and
memory in a Barne’s maze, with moderate learning impairment also
observed for the sucrose [sugar] group,” the study concluded.
Kanoski said the study
didn’t conclude that HFCS was worse overall as the results fell
within the margin of error.
What the study was
able to conclude was that the sugar only affected the adolescent
rats’ memory—the adults that consumed the sugar did not show any
negative effects. Kanoski said it could be because the study was too
short.
“I do expect that
with either a longer period of exposure or with a higher
concentration of carbohydrates that the adult animals would have
shown some cognitive deficits as well.”'
Links to Soda
The sugary solution
the rats were given had 11 percent sugar content, similar to the
ratio of water to sugar in many sodas. For example, a 12-ounce can of
Coca-Cola is 11.5 percent sugar.'
While the study has
not been done on humans, the rats could be a more extreme example of
what happens in children. About 35 to 40 percent of the calories the
rats consumed were from sugar or HFCS. American children and
adolescents on average eat about 16 percent of their calrories from
added sugars, according to a study done by Center for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) between 2005 and 2010.
Kanoski says the study
suggests that adolescence is a particularly sensitive period of
development for the negative impacts of sugar.
He and his team are
now planning to test how different kinds of simple sugars and HFCS
affect the brain.
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