How sugar affects the brain - Nicole Avena

16,787,164 views ・ 2014-01-07

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
Picture warm, gooey cookies,
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crunchy candies, velvety cakes,
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waffle cones piled high with ice cream.
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Is your mouth watering?
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Are you craving dessert?
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Why?
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What happens in the brain that makes sugary foods so hard to resist?
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Sugar is a general term used to describe a class of molecules
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called carbohydrates,
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and it's found in a wide variety of food and drink.
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Just check the labels on sweet products you buy.
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Glucose, fructose, sucrose,
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maltose, lactose, dextrose, and starch
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are all forms of sugar.
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So are high-fructose corn syrup,
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fruit juice, raw sugar, and honey.
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And sugar isn't just in candies and desserts,
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it's also added to tomato sauce,
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yogurt, dried fruit, flavored waters, or granola bars.
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Since sugar is everywhere, it's important to understand
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how it affects the brain.
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What happens when sugar hits your tongue?
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01:02
And does eating a little bit of sugar make you crave more?
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01:05
You take a bite of cereal.
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01:07
The sugars it contains activate the sweet-taste receptors,
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part of the taste buds on the tongue.
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These receptors send a signal up to the brain stem,
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and from there, it forks off into many areas of the forebrain,
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one of which is the cerebral cortex.
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Different sections of the cerebral cortex process different tastes:
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bitter, salty, umami,
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and, in our case, sweet.
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From here, the signal activates the brain's reward system.
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This reward system is a series of electrical and chemical pathways
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across several different regions of the brain.
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It's a complicated network,
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but it helps answer a single, subconscious question:
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should I do that again?
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That warm, fuzzy feeling you get when you taste Grandma's chocolate cake?
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That's your reward system saying,
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"Mmm, yes!"
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And it's not just activated by food.
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Socializing, sexual behavior, and drugs
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are just a few examples of things and experiences
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that also activate the reward system.
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But overactivating this reward system kickstarts a series of unfortunate events:
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loss of control, craving, and increased tolerance to sugar.
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Let's get back to our bite of cereal.
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It travels down into your stomach and eventually into your gut.
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And guess what?
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There are sugar receptors here, too.
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They are not taste buds, but they do send signals
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telling your brain that you're full
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or that your body should produce more insulin
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to deal with the extra sugar you're eating.
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The major currency of our reward system is dopamine,
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an important chemical or neurotransmitter.
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There are many dopamine receptors in the forebrain,
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but they're not evenly distributed.
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Certain areas contain dense clusters of receptors,
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and these dopamine hot spots are a part of our reward system.
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Drugs like alcohol, nicotine, or heroin
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send dopamine into overdrive,
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leading some people to constantly seek that high,
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in other words, to be addicted.
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Sugar also causes dopamine to be released, though not as violently as drugs.
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And sugar is rare among dopamine-inducing foods.
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Broccoli, for example, has no effect,
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which probably explains
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why it's so hard to get kids to eat their veggies.
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Speaking of healthy foods,
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let's say you're hungry and decide to eat a balanced meal.
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You do, and dopamine levels spike in the reward system hot spots.
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But if you eat that same dish many days in a row,
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dopamine levels will spike less and less, eventually leveling out.
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That's because when it comes to food,
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the brain evolved to pay special attention to new or different tastes.
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Why?
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Two reasons:
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first, to detect food that's gone bad.
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And second, because the more variety we have in our diet,
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the more likely we are to get all the nutrients we need.
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To keep that variety up,
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we need to be able to recognize a new food,
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and more importantly, we need to want to keep eating new foods.
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And that's why the dopamine levels off when a food becomes boring.
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Now, back to that meal.
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What happens if in place of the healthy, balanced dish,
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you eat sugar-rich food instead?
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If you rarely eat sugar or don't eat much at a time,
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the effect is similar to that of the balanced meal.
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But if you eat too much, the dopamine response does not level out.
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In other words, eating lots of sugar will continue to feel rewarding.
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In this way, sugar behaves a little bit like a drug.
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It's one reason people seem to be hooked on sugary foods.
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So, think back to all those different kinds of sugar.
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Each one is unique, but every time any sugar is consumed,
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it kickstarts a domino effect in the brain that sparks a rewarding feeling.
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Too much, too often, and things can go into overdrive.
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So, yes, overconsumption of sugar can have addictive effects on the brain,
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but a wedge of cake once in a while won't hurt you.
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