Sugar and your brain: Is Alzheimer's disease actually type 3 diabetes?

 

Sugar and your brain: Is Alzheimer's disease actually type 3 diabetes?

Dr. B.J. Hardick, D.C.
Greenmedinfo.com
Sun, 15 Dec 2013 12:47 CST
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It starves your brain, tangles and twists vital cells, and for decades it has been misrepresented as an untreatable, genetically determined disease. Alzheimer's disease is the 6th leading cause of death in North America1. The truth, however, is that this devastating illness shares a strong link with another sickness that wreaks havoc on millions of individuals in North America - Diabetes.

We all know that individuals affected by Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes have a notable resistance to insulin. Type 1 is caused by the body's inability to produce insulin, and Type 2 is caused by the deterioration of the body's insulin receptors and associated with the consumption of too much refined carbohydrate like processed grains and sugar. But when studies began to appear in 2005 that revealed a shocking correlation between insulin and brain cell deterioration, major breaks were made around Alzheimer's prevention[i]. Health practitioners became curious about a critical question - could Alzheimer's disease simply be Type 3 Diabetes?

Alzheimer's disease has long been perceived as mysterious and inevitable. 5.3 million individuals suffer every year from the disease that appears to be untreatable[ii]. But, if this illness is associated with insulin resistance, this simply isn't the case.

We already know that diabetics are at least twice as likely to experience dementia[iii]. The cells of your brain can become insulin-resistant just like other cells in the body. What was once considered a mysterious accumulation of beta amyloid plaques characteristic in the Alzheimer brain is now associated with the same lack of insulin that negatively affects cognition[iv].

Where there is knowledge about underlying causes there is the opportunity for prevention. Research that surfaced around problems with insulin and brain cell death offered health practitioners a way to identify useful prevention tactics that help restore the brain's cell function[v].

Your Brain on Carbohydrates

Most people know that a diet high in carbohydrates indicates a relationship to serious diseases like cancer, heart disease, and diabetes. What we haven't always known is the serious affect sugar has on our brain health. When you eat carbohydrates, which break down into sugar in the body, your blood sugar levels sky-rocket[vi]. High blood sugar levels also create inflammation, further causing your brain's health to weaken. Over time, a diet high in sugar translates into the accelerated death of supple, healthy brain cells[vii].

Studies have shown that brain cells shrink and become tangled from high blood sugar levels over time[viii]. This means that your sugar intake could be drastically affecting long-term brain health, inherently increasing the likelihood of developing lesions in the brain, which are linked to the deadly disease process we call Alzheimer's.

The good news is that the brain is very resilient. A handful of well-researched, holistic prevention tools have been shown to restore damaged brain cells, and return a dying brain to its fully functioning state[ix].

How do I decrease my risk for Type 3 Diabetes?

Coconut Oil

Many think it an unusual treatment, but it's the leading preventative tool in cognitive health. It doesn't take years or even months - coconut oil takes action on the brain after just one 40 ml dose[x]. Medium Chain Triglycerides (MCTs) are the primary fat found in coconut oil, and they are powerful in rapidly helping to boost brain metabolism and thereby increasing cognitive functioning. Recent, insightful research has shown that patients experienced significant neurological healing after 4-6 weeks of using the oil in their nutritional plans[xi].

Coconut oil is also a valuable source of fuel for the brain. When brain cells have undergone metabolic deterioration associated with insulin resistance, they can no longer accept glucose, the brain's main fuel source. However, coconut oil is rich in the medium chain fatty acids that break down into ketones in the liver, an alternative fuel for the brain that is as efficient as glucose.

Using coconut oil has been shown to control or even reverse the progressionof what has been recently reported as Type 3 diabetes[xii]. Try using extra virgin coconut oil in your cooking, baking, or your morning smoothies to receive exceptional cognitive benefits.

A Maximized Diet

Compelling reports have shown that the nutrition plan offered to individuals seeking Type 2 Diabetes prevention is one of the same plans offered to those looking to decrease their risk of Alzheimer's disease. This dietary prevention plan includes foods that are low in sugar and high in healthy fats, which creates a rich, healing environment for the brain. Your brain will thrive when you load up on friendly fats and decrease your carbohydrate intake[xiii]. Fats that are optimal for the promotion of plasticity in your brain include olive oil, avocados, salmon, and almonds. Even small increments of good fats can make a lasting difference on your brain's health, so implement them into your diet today - and every day!

The Best Carbs - Fruits and Veggies

Modern day Western culture has consumes voluminous quantities of processed carbohydrates and so-called 'whole grains.' As a result, health practitioners are finding strong links between these foods we eat and suboptimal brain health, which makes it imperative for you to adjust your carbohydrate intake. Fruits and vegetables that promote cell growth, are less inflammatory and acidic than are starchy carbs, and, with the exception of a few higher-sugar fruits, they are lower in sugar are ideal for preventing Type III diabetes[xiv]. Maximize your dishes with blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, kale, spinach, avocados, and other dark colored fruits and vegetables for peak cognitive functioning[xv].

Beta Carotene and Vitamin C

Of course a diet low in sugar, plentiful in good fats, and rich in dark colored vegetables is ideal for the health of your brain[xvi] Increasing your intake of antioxidants has also proven to be beneficial in nurturing and optimizing neural functioning. Research has shown that Vitamin C and Beta Carotene, found in foods like lemons, grapefruits, kale, and bell peppers, aids in the prevention of neurodegenerative diseases[xvii]. Excessive free radical production can create a dangerous atmosphere in the brain (making it rancid!), and antioxidants are a strong combatant against these brain-damaging agents. Increase your intake of antioxidants through fresh fruits and vegetables, or organic health supplements.

Chiropractic Care

Chiropractic research has shown that over time, the body's resistance to outflow from the brain can cause normal pressure hydrocephalus and toxic metabolic edema, which in turn causes the brain to break down[xviii]. This means that a decrease in normal fluid functioning without an increase in brain volume causes the brain to stop functioning. Naturally, in the prevention of Alzheimer's Disease (and any other cognitive disorder), schedule regular chiropractic appointments, and maintain a body system that is functioning at its highest potential.

Knowledge is Power

Recent research around neural deterioration and insulin resistance has been groundbreaking. The most notable, and curious, point is evidence that the disease could in fact, be preventable[xix]. Alzheimer's disease may no longer be a murky, genetically defined illness, if brain-healthy lifestyle choices are created and maintained.

About the author

Dr. B.J. Hardick is the co-author of the best-selling Maximized Living Nutrition Plans and a contributing author for The Cancer Killers. He is in private chiropractic practice in London, Ontario, Canada and has consulted for natural health clinics for over 20 years.

Sources

[i] nationalreviewofmedicine.com
[ii] greenmedinfo.com
[iii] neurology.org
[iv] opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com
[v] nationalreviewofmedicine.com
[vi] ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
[vii] Ibid
[viii] Ibid
[ix] greenmedinfo.com/blog
[x] Ibid
[xi] Ibid
[xii] Ibid
[xiii] Ibid
[xiv] http://applications.emro.who.int [pdf]
[xv] Ibid
[xvi] Ibid
[xvii] greenmedinfo.com
[xviii] dynamicchiropractic.com
[xix] www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

Wendy's picture

I'll never forget the dream I had back in the 80's during the Christmas season. There had been the ususal huge amount of sweets in the office and I had been eating lots of them. Then one night I dreamed about being addicted to a white powder. I think I was kind of thinking about cocaine because I knew many people my own age who had run into trouble with the drug, but it seems it was a warning to stay away from the sugar and also an admission of how dangerous and addictive it is.

lightwins's picture
CookiesSugar is a life-threatening poison and nearly everyone is addicted to it!

It's not just rotting teeth and obesity you're risking: From dementia to liver damage, the real toll of sugar

Chloe Lambert
The Daily Mail, UK
Tue, 17 Dec 2013 09:48 CST
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  • London cardiologist believes itr should be regulated like alcohol
  • 'It's toxic, unavoidable, capable of abuse and has negative impact on society'
  • Can trigger heart attacks, may cause dementia and is bad for livers
British adult will consume the equivalent of 32 teaspoons of the stuff on Christmas Day alone

Mince pies, pudding and brandy butter, chocolates, - Christmas truly is the season of sugar. The average British adult will consume the equivalent of 32 teaspoons of the stuff on Christmas Day alone, according to the British Heart Foundation.

UK guidelines recommend that we should have no more than 50g - or around ten teaspoons - of sugar a day.

But surveys suggest the average British adult goes over this by two teaspoons - much of this coming from sugars added to our food by manufacturers.

And sugar does more than rot your teeth: in recent months many experts have argued that it's sugar, not fat, that's to blame for our obesity epidemic.

Yet sugar is not just full of calories. Some scientists are claiming that, calorific content aside, a sugary diet is harmful because it alters crucial processes and hormone levels in the body. So can we safely indulge our sweet tooth over the Christmas period?

Dr Mark Vanderpump, an endocrinologist at the Royal Free Hampstead NHS Trust in London, says that while most healthy people can get away with the odd sugar binge, there is 'quite a large population in this country who are on the borderline of diabetes, and if they put enough pressure on the system, it may just tip them over the edge'.

To make matters worse, some experts believe sugar may be addictive. In a 2007 French study, rats allowed to choose between sugar and cocaine overwhelmingly chose sugar. This was even true among rats already given so much cocaine they were showing signs of addiction.

Dr Aseem Malhotra, a London cardiologist and member of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges obesity group, believes sugar should be regulated like alcohol because it shares four key characteristics. 'It's toxic, unavoidable, capable of abuse and has a negative impact on society,' he says.

So read on before you go in for that second helping of Christmas pudding. Read on as the experts explain the latest thinking about what sugar may do to the body.

Energy boost? No, you'll feel sleepy

After an energy high from the sugar, we experience a rapid slump

Whenever we eat, the pancreas produces the hormone insulin to take the sugar from food out of the bloodstream and into the cells to create energy.

But when we have something very sweet, it can cause a large release of insulin.

So after an energy high from the sugar, we experience a rapid slump as blood sugar levels quickly sink again, says Helen Bond, of the British Dietetic Association.

Indeed, a recent study at the University of Cambridge suggests sugar doesn't help with energy at all - in fact, it makes you sleepy.

Scientists found that sugar blocks the action of orexins, a type of brain cell responsible for feelings of wakefulness (orexins are also involved in telling the body to burn calories).

The researchers think this might explain the sleepiness we often experience after a big, carbohydrate-heavy meal, since carbohydrates break down into sugar very quickly in the body. They found that protein stimulates orexin cells.

So if you're feeling lethargic, it might be better to have a boiled egg than a sugary energy drink or chocolate bar.

It can trigger heart attacks

Sugar is bad news for the heart, even in seemingly healthy individuals, says cardiologist Dr Aseem Malhotra.

'Studies suggest that sugar causes the liver to produce more uric acid, and this leads to high blood pressure - the leading cause of death globally because it raises the risk of heart disease and stroke. Sugar also seems to raise cholesterol.

'What people don't realise is that you can develop these problems and have a normal body mass index (BMI). I see it all in the time in my clinic - people aren't overweight and don't have diabetes, yet they've had a heart attack. I think sugar is one of the main culprits.'

Sugar is a particular problem for those with diabetes, a condition that now affects around one in 20 British people. Here, the body becomes resistant to insulin or, in the case of type 1 diabetes, it doesn't produce any insulin at all.

'If a patient consumes more sugar than the body can handle, it will be passed out in the urine and it may affect their frequency. That's a precursor to diabetes in itself'

Without insulin to mop it up, sugar is left in the bloodstream, which can have serious effects all over the body, sometimes even if diabetes is being controlled by medication. People with diabetes are 48 per cent more likely to have a heart attack and 65 per cent more likely to have heart failure, according to the NHS's National Diabetes Audit.

That's because the condition causes abnormal cholesterol levels, and changes in the cells lining the blood vessels which lead to them narrowing or stiffening, says Dr David Price, a consultant in endocrinology and diabetes at Morriston Hospital in Swansea.

'It happens to every blood vessel in the body, but the coronary blood vessels are particularly thin, so any narrowing is pretty serious and can lead to a heart attack.'

You'll need the loo more often

One sign of high blood sugar levels is needing to urinate more, says Muhammad Shamim Khan, consultant urologist at Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital.

'If a patient consumes more sugar than the body can handle, it will be passed out in the urine and it may affect their frequency.

'That's a precursor to diabetes in itself because it puts stress on the pancreas.'

A sugary diet can also be a factor in recurrent bouts of yeast infections such as thrush, as yeasts thrive on sugar, says Justin Gaffney, chairman of the Genito-Urinary Nurses Association. 'There is a possible link between a sugary diet and thrush, and we do find some women who change their diet by reducing sugar find an improvement.'

It may cause dementia

A sugar slump can be a trigger for headaches and migraines

The sugar slump associated with sweet food and drinks can cause headaches, says Dr Andy Dowson, director of headache services at King's College London.

'Migraines tend to be triggered by changes, such as a change in sleep patterns or what you're eating. If you have a lot of sugar, your body can over-react and deal with it very quickly, so your blood sugar levels peak and then trough.

'This can be a trigger for headaches and migraines.'

Some evidence suggests that continuously high blood sugar levels might lead to ageing of the brain that's associated with dementia.

In a study published in the journal Neurology last year, researchers took brain scans of 249 people aged from 60 to 64 with blood sugar levels in the normal range.

After four years, those whose blood sugar levels were at the highest end of the normal range were more likely to have shrinkage in the hippocampus and the amygdala - areas of the brain associated with memory and cognitive function.

Meanwhile, for those with full- blown, type-2 diabetes sugar is strongly linked with dementia - probably because continuously high blood sugar levels damage the blood vessels, and so may lead to the brain being starved of oxygen and nutrients.

Sugar is as bad as booze for livers

Next time you're trying to resist the biscuit tin, it's worth bearing in mind what sugar does to your liver - some experts believe it's on a par with alcohol.

Any calories that aren't burned off in the body are stored in the liver in the form of fat, and over time this can lead to a condition called non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

Astonishingly, one in five British adults is in the early stages of this condition, according to the British Liver Trust.

It's more common in men than women, tends to happen after the age of 50, and studies suggest that some people are genetically predisposed to develop it more quickly than others. Although the majority of sufferers are overweight, it's possible to develop fatty liver disease even with a normal BMI, if your diet is poor.

Left untreated, it works in exactly the same way as liver disease caused by alcohol. The liver becomes scarred and eventually cirrhosis - irreversible liver damage - begins.
'The most common cause of liver cirrhosis is alcohol, and after that it's fatty liver disease, from bad diet,' says Dr Malhotra.
'Any calories that aren't burned off in the body are stored in the liver in the form of fat, and over time this can lead to a condition called non-alcoholic fatty liver disease'

This is because you put on weight, which in turn makes the body less sensitive to insulin. Insulin helps store sugar in the cells, but if it is less effective, the sugar gets stored as fat in the liver.
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is also a strong risk factor for type-2 diabetes, says Naveed Sattar, professor of metabolic medicine at the University of Glasgow.

'When the liver becomes fatty, it alters how the body handles sugar. Insulin normally works beautifully, but when organs are full of fat, it's not as sensitive and fast acting.

'There's more sugar hanging around in the bloodstream, and so the body makes more and more insulin to try and cope - and that's when diabetes starts.' If you're predisposed to diabetes - for example if you are of South Asian origin, or you have a family history of the condition, you may gain fat around the liver even more quickly than others.

It will make your gurgling tummy worse

Fructose can cause digestive problems

Fructose, the sugar found in fruit and fruit juices, and increasingly added to processed foods, can also cause digestive problems and make conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome worse, says Professor Peter Whorwell, a consultant gastroenterologist at Wythenshawe Hospital, Manchester.
'Fructose is considered a healthy option because it's not absorbed very well, so it's effectively lower in calories and won't cause you to put weight on.

'But that means it ends up in the gut where it's fermented by the bacteria there, causing symptoms such as wind, a gurgling tummy, and diarrhoea.

'This is why when most people eat a lot of fruit, they often find their bowels are looser.' Recently, a number of studies have found people with high blood sugar levels are more likely to develop cancers, including those of the liver, pancreas, breast and bowel.

A 2011 study of 5,000 post-menopausal women found that those with the highest blood sugar levels were nearly twice as likely to develop colorectal cancer as those with the lowest.

Bowel cancer has long been linked to obesity and previous research has suggested that the association is due to elevated levels of insulin.

But in this U. S. paper, published in the British Journal Of Cancer, there was no association between insulin levels and bowel cancer risk, leading the team to conclude that blood sugar was to blame.
'It's possible that elevated glucose levels are linked to increased growth factors [which stimulate cells to multiply] and inflammatory factors that spur the growth of intestinal polyps, some of which later develop into cancer,' said lead author Geoffrey Kabat, an epidemiologist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University, in New York.

A sweet tooth will age you

You know your love of cupcakes might affect your weight, but what if someone told you it could also make you look older?

That was the surprising suggestion from a 2011 study by the Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands.

Researchers measured the blood sugar levels of 600 men and women aged from 50 to 70, then showed their photos to a group of 60 independent assessors. The people who had a high level of glucose in their blood were consistently rated as looking older.

For every 180g of glucose per litre of blood, their estimated age rose by five months - even when factors such as smoking and sun exposure were taken into consideration. One theory is that when sugar is broken down in the body, it slows the production of collagen and elastin fibres - the building blocks of skin that help it look plump and youthful.

'Some studies show that a high glycaemic diet, high in refined carbohydrates such as white bread that release sugar quickly into the body, can make acne worse,' adds Dr Tabi Leslie, a consultant dermatologist at Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital.

Comment: "UK guidelines recommend that we should have no more than 50g - or around ten teaspoons - of sugar a day"

Ideally none at all should be consumed, see also:

146 reasons why sugar destroys your health

Sugar Should Be Regulated As Toxin, Researchers Say

Is Sugar Toxic?

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