Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Beware! High-fat Diet Can Alter Your Behaviour

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Mar, 2015 11:19 AM
    High-fat diet can affect brain health and promote changes in your behaviour, including increased anxiety, impaired memory, and repetitive behaviour, warns a new study.
     
    The findings published in the journal Biological Psychiatry suggest that even those who are not obese should avoid fatty foods to stave of diet-induced psychiatric disorders.
     
    High-fat diet produces changes in health and behaviour, in part, by changing the mix of bacteria in the gut, also known as the gut microbiome, the researchers noted.
     
    "This paper suggests that high-fat diets impair brain health, in part, by disrupting the symbiotic relationship between humans and the microorganisms that occupy our gastrointestinal tracks," commented John Krystal, editor of Biological Psychiatry.
     
    The human microbiome consists of trillions of microorganisms, many of which reside in the intestinal tract.
     
    The researchers at the Louisiana State University in the US tested whether an obesity-related microbiome alters behaviour and cognition even in the absence of obesity.
     
    Non-obese adult mice were conventionally housed and maintained on a normal diet, but received a transplant of gut microbiota from donor mice that had been fed either a high-fat diet or control diet.
     
    The recipient mice were then evaluated for changes in behaviour and cognition.
     
    The animals who received the microbiota shaped by a high-fat diet showed multiple disruptions in behaviour, including increased anxiety, impaired memory, and repetitive behaviours.
     
    Further, they showed many detrimental effects in the body, including increased intestinal permeability and markers of inflammation.
     
    Signs of inflammation in the brain were also evident and may have contributed to the behavioural changes, the researchers noted.
     
    These findings provide evidence that diet-induced changes to the gut microbiome are sufficient to alter brain function even in the absence of obesity.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Low-dose aspirin reduces blood clot risk

    Low-dose aspirin reduces blood clot risk
    Low-dose aspirin can help prevent new blood clots among people who are at risk and have already suffered a blood clot, says a promising study....

    Low-dose aspirin reduces blood clot risk

    Knee surgery not needed for mild osteoarthritis

    Knee surgery not needed for mild osteoarthritis
    Middle-aged and older patients with mild osteoarthritis of the knee may not benefit from the procedure of arthroscopic knee surgery, says new research....

    Knee surgery not needed for mild osteoarthritis

    Eye changes can predict dementia

    Eye changes can predict dementia
    A loss of cells in the retina is one of the earliest signs of a form of dementia in people with a genetic risk for the brain disorder - even before any changes appear....

    Eye changes can predict dementia

    Canadian doctors have begun using stem cell transplants to treat 'Stiff Person Syndrome'

    Canadian doctors have begun using stem cell transplants to treat 'Stiff Person Syndrome'

    TORONTO - Canadian doctors have begun using stem cell transplants to treat "stiff person syn...

    Canadian doctors have begun using stem cell transplants to treat 'Stiff Person Syndrome'

    Can right brain rhythm create a super-perceiving human?

    Can right brain rhythm create a super-perceiving human?
    A certain type of brainwave plays a key role in our sensitivity towards touch and driving. The right brain rhythm can make people have more perceptual and attentive powers...

    Can right brain rhythm create a super-perceiving human?

    Can Ebola strike India?

    Can Ebola strike India?
    There are about 500 Indians in Guinea, 3,000 in Liberia and 1,200 in Sierra Leone, from where the maximum cases have been reported. Nigeria has a much...

    Can Ebola strike India?