Food and Behaviour Research

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Carbohydrate craving: a double-blind, placebo-controlled test of the self-medication hypothesis

Corsica JA, Spring BJ. (2008) Eat Behav. 9(4): 447-54. Epub 2008 Aug 4. 

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

Abstract:

Carbohydrate craving, the overwhelming desire to consume carbohydrate-rich foods in an attempt to improve mood, remains a scientifically controversial construct. We tested whether carbohydrate preference and mood enhancement could be demonstrated in a double-blind, placebo-controlled self-administration trial.

Overweight females who met strict operational criteria for carbohydrate craving participated in two 3-day discrete choice trials over a 2-week period. Participants reported their mood before and at several time points after undergoing a dysphoric mood induction and ingesting, either a carbohydrate beverage or a taste and calorie-matched protein-rich balanced nutrient beverage. Every third testing day, participants were asked to self-administer the beverage they preferred based on its previous mood effect.

Results showed that, when rendered mildly dysphoric, carbohydrate cravers chose the carbohydrate beverage significantly more often than the protein-rich beverage and reported that carbohydrate produced greater mood improvement. The carbohydrate beverage was perceived as being more palatable by the carbohydrate cravers, although not by independent taste testers who performed the pre-trial taste matching.

This study, performed under rigorous study conditions, supports the existence of a carbohydrate craving syndrome in which carbohydrate self-administration improves mildly dysphoric mood

FAB RESEARCH COMMENT:

'Carbohydrate craving' is reported by many people in response to low mood, but there remains controversy over both this, and the more general concept of 'food addiction'.

This randomised controlled trial was designed to examine whether a carbohydrate-rich drink would be preferred over a protein-rich one, and their relative effects on mood, under double-blind conditions. 

The researchers found that overweight females, all selected for self-reported carbohydrate cravings, significantly preferred a carbohydrate-rich drink to a protein-rich drink following the induction of low mood.  They also reported more improvement in mood after consuming carbohydrate vs protein.

These findings indicate that for some individuals at least, consuming carbohydrates appears to boost low mood - with potential implications for both obesity and eating disorders.