Dietary Sugar and Mental Illness: A Surprising Link

Noted British psychiatric researcher Malcolm Peet has conducted a provocative cross-cultural analysis of the relationship between diet and mental illness. His primary finding may surprise you: a strong link between high sugar consumption and the risk of both depression and schizophrenia.

In fact, there are two potential mechanisms through which refined sugar intake could exert a toxic effect on mental health.

First, sugar actually suppresses activity of a key growth hormone in the brain called BDNF. This hormone promotes the health and maintenance of neurons in the brain, and it plays a vital role in memory function by triggering the growth of new connections between neurons. BDNF levels are critically low in both depression and schizophrenia, which explains why both syndromes often lead to shrinkage of key brain regions over time (yes, chronic depression actually leads to brain damage). There’s also evidence from animal models that low BDNF can trigger depression.

Second, sugar consumption triggers a cascade of chemical reactions in the body that promote chronic inflammation. Now, under certain circumstances (like when your body needs to heal a bug bite), a little inflammation can be a good thing, since it can increase immune activity and blood flow to a wound. But in the long term, inflammation is a big problem. It disrupts the normal functioning of the immune system, and wreaks havoc on the brain.

Inflammation is associated with an increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, and even some forms of cancer . . . it’s also linked to a greater risk of depression and schizophrenia. And again, eating refined sugar triggers inflammation. So does eating heavily processed molecular cousins like ‘high fructose corn syrup’.

If you think about it, it makes sense that our bodies don’t handle refined sugar very well. After all, for the vast majority (99.9%) of our existence as a species, there simply was no such sugar. We were endowed with a sweet tooth so that we’d crave the highly nutritious fruits that were available - sometimes in short supply - in the ancestral environment. But with the advent of processed sugar cane a few centuries ago, the blessing of our formerly adaptive sweet tooth suddenly turned into a curse - causing us to crave foods that we were simply never designed to process.

As I’ve become increasingly convinced by these research data, I’ve begun gently encouraging my depressed patients to simply try cutting out sugars for a couple of weeks to see if they notice any effect. (I also ask them to cut out simple starches - like crackers and white bread - which the body converts directly to sugars). A few have had the courage and determination to given it a go: they’re reported remarkable improvements in mood, energy, and mental clarity.

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This is one of the dumbest wacky theories on what causes mental illness (and there are a lot of them).

First of all, nutrition is not exactly a very precise science, and the evidence linking sugar to inflammation is weak (like most nutritional “facts”).

There is also no difference between fructose and sucrose. It’s processed the same way, and we would undeniably eat a lot of it in periods for most of our recent evolutionary history. So sugar is not a new and dangerous thing.

If you look into the BDNF thing, I’m sure you will find it’s pretty superficial as well. Nutritional knowledge from a few studies is never really trustworthy the way it is presented in the media, or even by some nutritionists themselves.

If you eat a lot of sugar but stay healthy otherwise, I’m sure there’s absolutely no reason to worry about this. I’d worry about your teeth, not your brain.

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I think there is definitely something to nutrition but I don’t think just eating well is THE cure. I think nutrition helps MOOD somewhat from my experience and that’s an important element of mental health. This is for myself at least the case

I went on a sugar free (or as close as I could get it) diet for months when the psychosis began because the voices told me too. No improvement occurred.

Bravo @anon9798425 for calling this out. Sugar is just the latest thing being demonised.

The media push the idea that it’s the ‘evil sugar industry’ making us obese. But the data shows that sugar consumption has actually been going down per capita despite obesity increasing.

The publication of the data caused quite a stir and accusations of fabrication from the anti-sugar lobby. It was extensively investigated for fraud - the authors were suspended for a while. Multiple independent statisticians found the data to be accurate and the analysis sound.

See this page for the actual data:

http://theaustralianparadox.com.au/

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http://www.actiononsugar.org/sugar-and-health/sugar-and-obesity/ for the opposing view

Some say it has an effect re obesity. Others say it doesn’t . The verdict ‘Not proven’ rather than ‘Guilty’ or ‘Not guilty’ .

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For some people, it is the cure. For example, some studies have discovered that for some, gluten was causing the psychosis. This isn’t a cure for everyone, but like I say, it is for some.

We all individually need to find out the cause of our psychosis. Unfortunately, it may be beyond science at the moment. I believe that for me, I’m harboring some occult infection.

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Can u elaborate what is an occult infection?

Yes I’ve been reading wheat belly and it says that it reversed psychosis in some people taking out the gluten. Idk how permanent that effect was. And yes as u say it was a subgroup of szcs I think.

Occult infection just means an infection that they can’t or haven’t yet detected. There’s some people, again a minority, whose psychosis responds to minocycline, and antibiotic which penetrates the CNS.

I just think that with a lot of money and testing, a few of us might be able to get to the bottom of our psychosis.

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Definitely true.
It’s obvious that if you eat heaps of sugar you’ll probably gain weight. That’s what the actiononsugar.org link you posted says and is the general consensus. But to blame the whole obesity epidemic on sugar alone seems a little simplistic to me.

What about the increased use of weight gain promoting antidepressants and antipsychotics? Antidepressants are very commonly prescribed.

What about computers and phones making us less active than we were?

There’s probably heaps of things happening together (genetics, gut bacteria, antibiotics etc etc)- some we don’t even know about yet.

I just don’t like it when people demonise whole essential food groups.

I don’t think that’s what they’re doing . They acknowledge multifactorial causes.

Yes, sorry I wasn’t talking about that site, I should have put that on a new paragraph.
I’m talking about the hysteria in the media about ‘evil sugar’. It’s just a macronutrient.