"Eating packaged foods like cereal
and frozen meals has been associated with anxiety, depression and cognitive
decline. Scientists are still piecing together why.
Roughly 60 percent of the calories
in the average American diet come from
highly processed foods. We’ve known for decades that eating such packaged
products — like some breakfast cereals, snack bars, frozen meals and virtually
all packaged sweets, among many other things — is linked to unwelcome health
outcomes, like an increased risk
of diabetes, obesity and even cancer. But more recent studies point to another
major downside to these often delicious, always convenient foods: They appear
to have a significant impact on our minds, too.
Research from the past ten or so
years has shown that the more ultraprocessed foods a person eats, the higher
the chances that they feel depressed and anxious. A few studies have suggested
a link between eating UPFs and increased risk of cognitive decline.
What’s so insidious about these
foods, and how can you avoid the mental fallout? Scientists are still working
on answers, but here’s what we know so far.
What
qualifies as an ultraprocessed food?
In 2009, Brazilian researchers put
food on a four-part scale, from unprocessed and minimally processed (like
fruits, vegetables, rice and flour) to processed (oils, butter, sugar, dairy
products, some canned foods, and smoked meats and fish) and ultraprocessed.
“Ultraprocessed foods include ingredients that are rarely used in homemade
recipes — such as high-fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated oils, protein isolates
and chemical additives” like colors, artificial flavors, sweeteners,
emulsifiers and preservatives, said Eurídice Martínez Steele, a researcher in
food processing at University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. This classification system
is now used widely by nutrition researchers.
UPFs make up a majority of the
packaged foods you find in the frozen food aisles at grocery stores and on the
menu at fast-food restaurants — 70 percent of the packaged foods sold in the
United States are considered ultraprocessed. They’re increasingly edging out
healthier foods in people’s diets and are widely consumed
across socioeconomic groups.
“Ultraprocessed foods are carefully
formulated to be so palatable and satisfying that they’re almost addictive,”
said Dr. Eric M. Hecht, an epidemiologist at the Schmidt College
of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University. “The problem is that in
order to make the products taste better and better, manufacturers make them less
and less like real food.”
What
effect do ultraprocessed foods have on mental health?
Recent research has demonstrated a
link between highly processed foods and low mood. In one 2022 study of over 10,000 adults in the
United States, the more UPFs participants ate, the more likely they were to
report mild depression or feelings of anxiety. “There was a significant
increase in mentally unhealthy days for those eating 60 percent or more of
their calories from UPFs,” Dr. Hecht, the study’s author, said. “This is not
proof of causation, but we can say that there seems to be an association.”
New research has also found a
connection between high UPF consumption and cognitive decline. A 2022 study that
followed nearly 11,000 Brazilian adults over a decade found a correlation
between eating ultraprocessed foods and worse cognitive function (the ability
to learn, remember, reason and solve problems). “While we have a natural
decline in these abilities with age, we saw that this decline accelerated by 28
percent in people who consume more than 20 percent of their calories from
UPFs,” said Natalia Gomes Goncalves, a professor at the University of São Paulo
Medical School and the lead author of the study.
It’s possible that eating a healthy
diet may offset the detrimental effects of eating ultraprocessed foods. The
Brazilian researchers found that following a healthy eating regimen, like the MIND diet — which is rich in whole
grains, green leafy vegetables, legumes, nuts, berries, fish, chicken and olive
oil — greatly reduced the dementia risk associated with consuming
ultraprocessed foods. Those who followed the MIND diet but still ate UPFs “had
no association between UPF consumption and cognitive decline,” Dr. Goncalves
said, adding that researchers still don’t know what a safe quantity of UPFs is.
Why
might ultraprocessed foods have this effect?
It’s unclear. “Many high-quality,
randomized studies have shown
the beneficial effect of a nutrient-dense diet on depression, but we still do
not fully understand the role of food processing on mental health,” said
Melissa Lane, a researcher at the Food & Mood Centre at Deakin University
in Australia. However, there are some clues.
Much of the research has focused on
how poor gut health might affect the brain. Diets that are high in ultraprocessed foods are typically low in fiber,
which is mostly found in plant-based foods like whole grains, fruits, vegetables,
nuts and seeds. Fiber helps feed the good bacteria in the gut. Fiber is also
necessary for the production of short-chain fatty acids, the substances
produced when it breaks down in the digestive system, and which play an
important role in brain function, said Wolfgang Marx, the president of
the International Society for Nutritional Psychiatry Research and a senior
research fellow at Deakin University. “We
know that people with depression and other mental disorders have a less diverse
composition of gut bacteria and fewer short-chain fatty acids.”
Chemical additives in UPFs might also have an impact on gut
flora. “Emerging evidence — mostly from animal studies, but also some human
data — suggests that isolated nutrients (like fructose), additives such as artificial
sweeteners (like aspartame and saccharin) or emulsifiers (like
carboxymethylcellulose and polysorbate-80) can negatively influence the gut
microbiome,” Dr. Marx said.
Poor gut microbiota diversity — as well as a diet high in
sugar — may contribute to chronic inflammation, which has been linked to a host
of mental and physical issues, Dr. Lane said. “Interactions between increased
inflammation and the brain are thought to drive the development of depression,”
she said.
It’s also worth considering the
possibility that the link between highly processed foods and mental health
works in both directions. “Diet does influence mood, but the reverse is also
true,” said Dr. Frank Hu, a professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “When you get stressed, anxious or
depressed, you tend to eat more unhealthy foods, in particular ultraprocessed
foods that are high in sugar, fat and chemical additives.”
How
to recognize ultraprocessed foods
The best way to identify ultraprocessed foods is
to read product labels. “A long list of ingredients, and especially one that
includes ingredients you would never use in home cooking,” are clues that the
food is ultraprocessed, said Whitney Linsenmeyer, an assistant professor
of nutrition at Saint Louis University in Missouri and a spokeswoman
for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Chemical names, unpronounceable
words, and anything you would be unlikely to find in a kitchen cabinet are
often signs that a food is in the ultraprocessed category.
You can still use convenience foods
to make cooking easier without resorting to ultraprocessed foods. Products such
as canned beans, frozen vegetables, precooked brown rice or canned fish are all
shortcut ingredients that fit well within the scope of a healthy diet, provided
there aren’t any industrial items on the ingredient list. “If the added
ingredients are ones you would use yourself, like herbs, spices, salt or
cooking oils,” Dr. Linsenmeyer said, “that’s an indication that the food, while
processed, is not inherently bad for you.”"
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą