Friday, October 7, 2011

Funny, How Not to Run

Feed the Brain, Not the Gut

To Ditch Dessert, Feed the Brain

If the brain goes hungry, Twinkies look a lot better
, a study led by researchers at Yale University and the University of Southern California has found.

Brain imaging scans show that
when glucose levels drop, an area of the brain known to regulate emotions and impulses loses the ability to dampen desire for high-calorie food, according to the study published online September 19 in The Journal of Clinical Investigation.

"Our prefrontal cortex is a sucker for glucose," said Rajita Sinha, the Foundations Fund Professor of Psychiatry, and professor in the Department of Neurobiology and the Yale Child Study Center, one of the senior authors of the research.


The Yale team manipulated glucose levels intravenously and monitored changes in blood sugar levels while subjects were shown pictures of high-calorie food, low-calorie food and non-food as they underwent fMRI scans.


When glucose levels drop, an area of the brain called the hypothalamus senses the change. Other regions called the insula and striatum associated with reward are activated, inducing a desire to eat, the study found.
The most pronounced reaction to reduced glucose levels was seen in the prefrontal cortex. When glucose is lowered, the prefrontal cortex seemed to lose its ability to put the brakes upon increasingly urgent signals to eat generated in the striatum. This weakened response was particularly striking in the obese when shown high-calorie foods.

"This response was quite specific and more dramatic in the presence of high-calorie foods," Sinha said.


"Our results suggest that obese individuals may have a limited ability to inhibit the impulsive drive to eat, especially when glucose levels drop below normal,"
commented Kathleen Page, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Southern California and one of the lead authors of the paper.

A similarly robust response to high-calorie food was also seen in the striatum, which became hyperactive when glucose was reduced. However, the levels of
the stress hormone cortisol seemed to play a more significant role than glucose in activating the brain's reward centers, note the researchers. Sinha suggests that the stress associated with glucose drops may play a key role in activating the striatum.

"The key seems to be eating healthy foods that maintain glucose levels," Sinha said. "The brain needs its food."
Those with a diet mind-set will often make food decisions based on what they perceive to be the best for reducing the fat on their <insert body part that they are unhappy with>.  This could be a food choice that sends blood glucose levels fluctuating, perhaps via their influence on insulin secretion levels.  Or they could be skipping meals (in the context of conventional eating), leading to a fall in blood glucose levels.  These choices, either way, become short-term strategies which, in the medium to long term, can have EPIC FAIL written all over them if they end up triggering the responses to energy-dense (and neolithic agents of disease-dense) foods as outlined above.

Perhaps part of the success of a paleo-templated diet might lie in its ability to stabilise energy (glucose) supply to the brain, substantially reducing (if not eliminating) the pull of junk food?

Full paper here.

A Runner's Story of Stride Correction


Overstriding promotes a heel-first landing that reduces running efficiency and increases impact stress on legs and feet.

Overstriding promotes a heel-first landing that reduces running efficiency and increases impact stress on legs and feet.

Photograph by: ALLEN MCINNIS GAZETTE FILE, The Gazette

I've jumped on the forefoot running bandwagon. And while the jury is still out regarding its long-term benefits, I've decided to give this much-heralded technique a try.
The reason I've changed my running style after 20 years is I can't seem to get rid of my knee pain. And after reading about my ongoing battle with iliotibial band syndrome (pain on the outside of the knee), veteran triathlete coach Gilbert Ayoub offered to look at my technique and suggest tips on making running more "knee friendly."
Ayoub's evaluation tools include a treadmill, camera, large-screen TV and a keen eye, which he used to take stock of my style. The conclusion is that I overstride, which Ayoub says promotes a heel first landing that reduces running efficiency and increases impact stress on the lower extremities.

His suggestion is to shorten my stride, increase my turnover, lift my heels higher, adopt a more forward lean and change from striking heel first to a mid-to forefoot landing.