Does a bad diet influence mental health?

TidWell

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We’ve long been told “you are what you eat”, with diet influencing our heart health, weight and even cancer risk.

Yet how our food choices impact our mental wellbeing was less understood.

Scientists from the University of Gothenburg looked at an array of studies investigating the link between diet and a range of mental-health disorders.

They found “reasonable evidence” a Mediterranean diet rich in fish, olive oil and vegetables could ward off anxiety and depression.

Lacking vitamin B12 - an essential nutrient found in animal products - may also trigger fatigue, a foggy memory and low mood, the team added.

“We found there is increasing evidence of a link between a poor diet and the worsening of mood disorders, including anxiety and depression,” lead author Professor Suzanne Dickson said.

“The message is the effects of diet on mental health are real, but we need to be careful about jumping to conclusions on the base of provisional evidence.”

It is increasingly accepted that “what is good for the heart is good for the brain”.

Yet the scientists felt when it comes to our mental health, the so-called benefits of certain foods are exaggerated and lack evidence.

READ MORE: Pollution linked to higher rates of depression and suicide

The structure and function of the brain requires a healthy intake of fat, protein, vitamins and minerals, they wrote in the European Neuropsychopharmacology journal.

It is therefore “logical food intake and quality would have an impact on brain function, which makes diet a modifiable variable to target mental health”.

After analysing a range of studies, the scientists concluded there is “reasonable evidence” a Mediterranean diet minimises the risk of certain mental-health issues, warranting further investigation.

They also found a “strong link” vitamin B12 deficiency in childhood increases the risk of depression in later life. The vitamin is thought to play a key role in neurodevelopment.

Results also support the low-carb, high-fat Keto diet - popular with celebrities like Gwyneth Paltrow and Halle Berry - eases seizures in epileptic children.

When it comes to other claims, like diets improve autism or ADHD symptoms, the scientists stress evidence is inconclusive.

“With individual conditions, we often found very mixed evidence”, Professor Dickson said.

“We can see an increase in the quantity of refined sugar in the diet seems to increase ADHD and hyperactivity, whereas eating more fresh fruit and vegetables seems to protect against these conditions.

“But there are comparatively few studies and many don't last long enough to show long-term effects”.

READ MORE: Adding 35 minutes to your workout 'slashes the risk of depression'

While further research is required, the scientists admit such studies are difficult to carry out.

“In healthy adults dietary effects on mental health are fairly small and that makes detecting these effects difficult,” Professor Dickson said.

“It may be dietary supplementation only works if there are deficiencies due to a poor diet.

“We also need to consider genetics; subtle differences in metabolism may mean some people respond better to changes in diet that others.

“There are also practical difficulties which need to be overcome in testing diets.

“We can give someone a dummy pill to see if there is an improvement due to the placebo effect, but you can't easily give people dummy food.”

With the microbiome also a growing area of research, some believe gut health may influence mental wellbeing.

“Many high-quality findings (mainly from animal studies) have been published in top-notch journals in recent years,” Professor Andreas Reif, chair of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology scientific programme committee, said.

“This contrasts with the comparative shortage of hard evidence on how nutrition and mental health are connected in humans.

“This leaves room for speculation and flawed science.

“This comprehensive review is therefore much-needed as it sheds light on hypes and hopes, facts and fiction.”

https://www.yahoo.com/news/does-diet-influence-mental-health-165000937.html
 
I aint reading all that dude.

But yeah it does. Omega 3's son!
 
Yes. I beat depression by quitting fast food and exercising.
 
I would love to hear somebody argue otherwise.
 
I would assume it does. If for no other reason than you feel better physically when you eat healthy. And not just because your body image improves, but you actually feel more alert, among other things. That has to impact your mental health in a positive way.
 
Whatever works. The mind is as mysterious as the vacuum or the abyss though. We can tell ourselves anything we want and from my perspective there are too many people out there telling themselves life sucks on repeat. Try the opposite and see what happens. Mind always comes before body and it is unbelievably strong and flexible for every single human being that recognizes that.
 
Definitely helped me. A massive change was realizing that mental and physical health are one and the same. We do not have a brain. Or a body. We ARE our brain and our body. It's all one unit. If you are physically unhealthy, then it's going to be MUCH harder to be mentally healthy too.

I have a small mantra, of sorts, that I use;

Diet. Exercise. Sunlight. Sleep. Social.

If I keep all those things in check, I'm generally pretty stable. When those things lapse, so does my mental health.
 
Anecdotal:

I usually get the urge to eat shit tons of hamburgers and fries/tacos/burritos every couple of months and usually I make my own tacos or burritos so I don’t see too much change but whenever it’s burgers (Arby’s, five guys, in N out and of course Wendy’s) I’ve noticed my usual passive aggressiveness turns more to the aggressive and less patient side, add to that harder to wake up (I’m a strict 5am guy) and poorer skin quality as well a a lethargic feeling half way through the day.

My usual diet would be:

Breakfast steak and eggs for with brown bread and a coffee

Snacks almonds and water

Lunch two chicken breasts or steak or Alaskan cod asparagus broccoli mash taties eggs

Dinner steak/fish/chicken bratwurst/ Wiener schnitzel veggies and water

Midnight snacks milk toast eggs

just a short and brief description that changes daily but I feel strong and ready to take on the day every morning (I’ve never been to the gym but will run a little stretch and judo throw my wife around, she’s a judoka)
 
Absolutely.

A poor diet = poor physical and mental health.
 
Another amazing study from No Shit Sherlock University.
 
When I was in the best shape of my life, I was the most depressed. My diet was shit though. I just did so much cardio and lifting it didn't matter.

Wait....
 
Yes. Being able to eat pizza and burgers helps keep me from just snapping on people.
 
No, we are God's children after all.
 
Of course, one's diet can influence one's state of mind. If you're in poor health then your mental health will suffer as well. But I'm highly skeptical of any study that suggests that a change in one's diet can cure someone who suffers from clinical depression, bipolar disorder or any other form of mental illness.
I eat a pretty damn good diet & I exercise regularly. And yet, I still need the medications that help me to manage my bipolar disorder. In fact, back when I was fighting & eating as clean as possible in order to make weight & in peak physical condition, I still needed to be medicated or I would be very symptomatic.
So, in my own personal experience, there's no way that a simple change in diet is capable of having a dramatic change in the mental health of someone with a legitimate diagnosis.
 
Of course it does. What a person eats can affect gene expression and impact what Their future offspring inherits from them.
 
I think there will always be a correlation, but I dont think it's the direct cause.

I think it leads to looking uglier, in general, and the external social pressure is what hurts your self-esteem.
 
Yes it does 100%
 
I agree. Not long ago I read an older book by a doctor that would treat patients with mental problems by changing their diets. The book was just about case studies but quite interesting to me. The physician didn't look at diets such as the keto diet or Mediterranean diet, but instead would concentrate on suspected food allergies and environmental allergies. Some examples presented were a patient who loved eggs, at eggs with every meal, but would become overly grumpy and tired a few hours after eating eggs. Another patient had a milk allergy, she wasn't able to concentrate on school work if anything dairy was consumed. Another patient experienced psychotic episodes when ever beets were consumed. She would become a mad raving lunatic for a few hours after consuming beets and would return to a more normal person afterwards. Some patients had mental issues when consuming regular store bought fruit. If fruit was eaten were no chemical were sprayed onto them, no psychological issues happened. Etc.
 
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