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How the food you eat affects your brain - Mia Nacamulli

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    You Brain on Food
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    If you sucked all of the moisture
    out of your brain
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    and broke it down to its constituent
    nutritional content,
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    what would it look like?
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    Most of the weight of your dehydrated
    brain would come from fats,
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    also known as lipids.
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    In the remaining brain matter,
    you would find proteins and amino acids,
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    traces of micronutrients,
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    and glucose.
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    The brain is, of course, more than
    just the sum of its nutritional parts,
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    but each component does have
    a distinct impact on functioning,
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    development,
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    mood,
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    and energy.
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    So that post-lunch apathy,
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    or late-night alertness
    you might be feeling,
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    well, that could simply be the effects
    of food on your brain.
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    Of the fats in your brain,
    the superstars are omegas 3 and 6.
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    These essential fatty acids,
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    which have been linked to preventing
    degenerative brain conditions,
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    must come from our diets.
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    So eating omega-rich foods,
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    like nuts,
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    seeds,
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    and fatty fish,
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    is crucial to the creation and maintenance
    of cell membranes.
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    And while omegas are good fats
    for your brain,
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    long-term consumption of other fats,
    like trans and saturated fats,
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    may compromise brain health.
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    Meanwhile, proteins and amino acids,
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    the building block nutrients of growth
    and development,
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    manipulate how we feel and behave.
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    Amino acids contain the precursors
    to neurotransmitters,
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    the chemical messengers that carry
    signals between neurons,
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    affecting things like mood,
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    sleep,
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    attentiveness,
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    and weight.
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    They're one of the reasons we might feel
    calm after eating a large plate of pasta,
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    or more alert after protein-rich meal.
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    The complex combinations
    of compounds in food
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    can stimulate brain cells to release
    mood-altering norepinephrine,
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    dopamine,
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    and serotonin.
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    But getting to your brain cells is tricky,
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    and amino acids have to compete
    for limited access.
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    A diet with a range of foods helps
    maintain a balanced combination
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    of brain messengers,
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    and keeps your mood from getting skewed
    in one direction or the other.
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    Like the other organs in our bodies,
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    our brains also benefit from a steady
    supply of micronutrients.
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    Antioxidants in fruits and vegetables
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    strengthen the brain to fight off
    free radicals that destroy brain cells,
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    enabling your brain to work well
    for a longer period of time.
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    And without powerful micronutrients,
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    like the vitamins B6,
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    B12,
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    and folic acid,
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    our brains would be susceptible
    to brain disease and mental decline.
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    Trace amounts of the minerals iron,
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    copper,
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    zinc,
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    and sodium
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    are also fundamental to brain health
    and early cognitive development.
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    In order for the brain to efficiently
    transform and synthesize
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    these valuable nutrients,
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    it needs fuel, and lots of it.
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    While the human brain only
    makes up about 2% of our body weight,
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    it uses up to 20% of our energy resources.
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    Most of this energy comes
    from carbohydrates
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    that our body digest into glucose,
    or blood sugar.
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    The frontal lobes are so sensitive
    to drops in glucose, in fact,
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    that a change in mental function
    is one of the primary signals
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    of nutrient deficiency.
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    Assuming that we are getting
    glucose regularly,
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    how does the specific type
    of carbohydrates we eat affect our brains?
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    Carbs come in three forms:
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    starch,
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    sugar,
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    and fiber.
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    While on most nutrition labels,
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    they are all lumped
    into one total carb count,
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    the ratio of the sugar and fiber subgroups
    to the whole amount
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    affect how the body and brain respond.
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    A high glycemic food, like white bread,
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    causes a rapid release of glucose
    into the blood,
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    and then comes the dip.
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    Blood sugar shoots down,
    and with it, our attention span and mood.
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    On the other hand, oats, grains,
    and legumes have slower glucose release,
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    enabling a steadier level
    of attentiveness.
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    For sustained brain power,
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    opting for a varied diet of nutrient-rich
    foods is critical.
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    When it comes to what you bite,
    chew, and swallow,
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    your choices have a direct
    and long lasting effect
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    on the most powerful organ in your body.
Title:
How the food you eat affects your brain - Mia Nacamulli
Speaker:
Mia Nacamulli
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:53

English subtitles

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