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Sugar like a drug, says neuroscientists


Candy hangover? Source
 
 
 
 
 

Anyone who's ever scored big at Halloween then overindulged in candy as a kid knows what a sugar hangover feels like. We've all been there, right?

Well, hangover is exactly the way to describe it.  While it may be no news to those with a sweet tooth, the addictive qualities of sugar got some attention from the science community last week. Research presented at the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology detailed how rats respond to sugar binges just like they would to morphine, alcohol or cocaine.

"Our findings with lab rats show that intermittent access to sugar can lead to changes in the brain and behavior similar to those caused by drugs of abuse," said Bart Hoebel, PhD, Professor of Psychology at Princeton University and the study's lead investigator. "In certain models, sugar-binging causes long-lasting effects on the brain and increases the inclination to take other drugs of abuse, including alcohol."

Sugar has long been credited with undermining health in a variety of ways, like contributing to cavities, and offering no nutritive value (unless you need extra calories) to the diet. If you follow nutrition news, you know that there's been a debate raging about the role of simple carbohydrates (sugars) in the obesity epidemic, as our nutrition environment is currently awash in the stuff. 

This research adds yet another layer to the question of just how sugar operates in the body. And if you needed one, it gives yet another reason to ease off the cookies and candy this sugar coated season.

 

For more info: If you suspect you've got a sugar problem, you've come to the right place. Examiner has a number of low-carb columnists with loads of ideas for kicking the habit. Check out low-carbers for starters:

 

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Nutrition Examiner

Dietitian and author Annie Kay cooked her way through Cornell, BU and over a decade of communicating the art and science of nutrition through...

Comments

  • Laurie 3 years ago
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    I never thought sugar effected children's behavior. If you believe that sugar makes children hyper you attribute their high spirits to their intake of sugar. Unless you are diabetic or obese, sugar is just fine to consume.

  • Laurie 3 years ago
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    I never thought sugar effected children's behavior. If you believe that sugar makes children hyper you attribute their high spirits to their intake of sugar. Unless you are diabetic or obese, sugar is just fine to consume.

  • mattthecoolist 3 years ago
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    This study is a good example of why we need to stop outlawing drugs. Why should I as a tax payer have to pay taxes towards people that use refine sugar that are overweight or have diabetes? People choose there life styles and should have the right to do so. But for me to have to pay for the health cost that refine sugar causes is wrong. Same as me having to pay taxes for something that people do in their own home. If people want to use drugs in their own home let theme. But for me to pay the legal bill for a bunch of white "Moral Majority Christian" that are toting "zero tolerance" when they are the filthy ones-ie Bankers, Enron, Murdock ect.. is driving America into the ground.

  • Annie 3 years ago
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    Hi Cool Matt. It does feel like things are getting more complicated and morally ambiguous...

    Hi Laurie, I think that a particular child's response to sugar is probably highly individual. And I would tend to agree with you too about weight/diabetes. If you weight is healthy and you're reasonably fit then sugar may not be your highest priority. Thanks!
    Annie

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