Food and Behaviour Research

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UK Nutrient Gaps and Impacts on Early Development with Dr Emma Derbyshire and TC Callis - BOOK HERE

Bread and Other Edible Agents of Mental Disease.

Bressan P, Kramer P (2016) Front Hum Neurosci. 10:130 doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00130. 

Web URL: View this and related abstracts via PubMed here. Free full text of this article is available online

Abstract:


Perhaps because gastroenterology, immunology, toxicology, and the nutrition and agricultural sciences are outside of their competence and responsibility, psychologists and psychiatrists typically fail to appreciate the impact that food can have on their patients' condition.
 
Here we attempt to help correct this situation by reviewing, in non-technical, plain English, how cereal grains - the world's most abundant food source - can affect human behavior and mental health.

We present the implications for the psychological sciences of the findings that, in all of us, bread

(1) makes the gut more permeable and can thus encourage the migration of food particles to sites where they are not expected, prompting the immune system to attack both these particles and brain-relevant substances that resemble them, and

(2) releases opioid-like compounds, capable of causing mental derangement if they make it to the brain.
 
A grain-free diet, although difficult to maintain (especially for those that need it the most), could improve the mental health of many and be a complete cure for others.

FAB RESEARCH COMMENT:

See the associated blog post here by Dr Paul Whitely - with informed comments on some of the issues raised by this article.