From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sugar addiction is a
term popularly applied to individuals who express difficulty
controlling intake of sweet foods or beverages. Although the term
itself is not generally used to refer any scientific construct,
mounting evidence suggests that under certain conditions,
consumption of sweets or sugar may indeed become
addiction-like.[1]
Scientific
evidence
Any concept of sugar addiction is complicated by a lack of
consensus on the actual definition of addiction.
There has been reference to the idea of sugar addiction in the
popular literature for a number of years. In 1998, Kathleen
DesMaisons[2]
outlined the concept of sugar addiction as a measurable
physiological state caused by activation of mu opioid receptors in the brain. Her work
extracted data from studies done by Blass[3] showing
that sugar acted as an analgesic drug whose effects could be
blocked by a morphine blocker. Acting on years of anecdotal
evidence from her work in the field of addiction, DesMaisons noted
that dependence on sugar followed the same track outlined in the
DSM IV for other drugs of abuse.
Since that time, a growing body of laboratory evidence has
confirmed DesMaisons' hypothesis. Bart Hoebel at Princeton began
showing the neurochemical effects of sugar, noting that sugar might
serve as a gate drug for other drugs.
In 2008, Nicole Avena published data[4] stating
that sugar affects opioids and dopamine in the brain, and thus
might be expected to have addictive potential. She references
"Bingeing," "withdrawal," "craving" and "cross-sensitization" are
each given operational definitions and demonstrated behaviorally
with sugar bingeing as the reinforcer. These behaviors are then
related to neurochemical changes in the brain that also occur with
addictive drugs. Neural adaptations include changes in dopamine and
opioid receptor binding, enkephalin mRNA expression and dopamine
and acetylcholine release in the nucleus accumbens.
- "Recent behavioral tests in rats further back the idea of an overlap between
sweets and drugs. Drug addiction often includes three steps. A
person will increase his intake of the drug, experience withdrawal
symptoms when access to the drug is cut off and then face an urge
to relapse back into drug use. Rats on sugar have similar
experiences. Researchers withheld food for 12 hours and then gave
rats food plus sugar water. This created a cycle of binging where
the animals increased their daily sugar intake until it doubled.
When researchers either stopped the diet or administered an opioid
blocker the rats showed signs common to drug withdrawal, such as
teeth-chattering and the shakes. Early findings also indicate signs
of relapse. Rats weaned off sugar repeatedly pressed a lever that
previously dispensed the sweet solution." (Leah Ariniello, Brain
Briefings, October 2003)
The sugar industry claims that similar effects have been
reported for rats given solutions that tasted sweet, but contained
no calories. [1] However,
caloric value may not be the issue. Sugar and the taste of sweet
stimulate the brain by activating beta endorphin receptor sites.
These are the same chemicals activated by heroin and morphine.
Some psychologists maintain that results of
this type may indeed provide a new way of looking at overeating, but that much
caution should be exercised about using them to effectively put
sugar in the same category as drugs. They believe there is some overlap
between the systems that control food intake and addiction but this
cannot yet unambiguously be said to necessarily make certain foods
addictive.
Some animals, and some people, may become overly dependent on
sweet food, particularly if they periodically stop eating and then
binge. This may relate to eating
disorders such as bulimia. It would probably be more correct
to refer to the laboratory rats referred to above as
"sugar-dependent" rather than "addicted." In general, to
be classified as an addiction, reproducible "double blind"
experiments would have to show that the experimental subjects
exhibited all three elements that make up the definition of this
term: a behavioral pattern of increased intake and changes in brain
chemistry; then signs of withdrawal and further changes in brain
chemistry upon deprivation; and third, signs of craving and relapse
after withdrawal is over.
In 2003, a report was commissioned by two U.N. agencies, the World Health Organization and
the Food and Agriculture
Organization, compiled by a panel of 30 international experts.
It stated that sugar should not account for more than 10% of a
healthy diet.[2] In contrast, the
US Sugar Association [3] insists that
other evidence indicates that a quarter of our food and drink
intake can safely consist of sugar. However, this contradicts the
sugar industry's criticism of the research discussed above:
- Research into sugar addiction was initiated at one research
group at Princeton University where they fed rats chow as well as a
25% sugar solution - similar to the sugar concentration of
soda-pop. In just 1 month the rats became dependent on their daily
dose of sweet stuff, they gradually chose to eat less chow but
increased their intake of the sugary drink until it doubled." Tufts
University Health & Nutrition Letter.New York:OCT 2002. Vol.20,
Iss. 8; Pg.1,3 pgs. [4]
"The rats were given a drug to block their opiate-receptors and
showed withdrawal signs typical of drug-addicted rats- teeth
chattering, paw tremors, and head shakes."
Since the preliminary work at Princeton, a number of studies
have continued and expanded the assertion for the evidence of sugar
addiction.
See also
References
- ^
Hoebel BG; Rada P; Avena NM (2008).
"Evidence for sugar addiction: behavioral and neurochemical effects
of intermittent, excessive sugar intake". Neuroscience and
Biobehavioral Review 32: 20–39. PMID 17617461.
- ^
Kathleen DesMaisons, Ph.D. (1998). "Potatoes Not Prozac." Simon
& Schuster. ISBN 141655615X
- ^
Blass, E., E. Fitzgerald, and P. Kehoe, Interactions between
sucrose, pain and isolation distress. Pharmacol Biochem Behav,
1987. 26(3): p. 483-9.
- ^
Avena NM, Rada P, Hoebel BG. Evidence for sugar addiction:
behavioral and neurochemical effects of intermittent, excessive
sugar intake. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2008;32(1):20-39. Epub 2007
May 18.
Further
reading
- Kathleen DesMaisons, Ph.D. (2000). The Sugar Addict's Total
Recovery Program. Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-44132-X.
- Kathleen DesMaisons, Ph.D. (2008). "Potatoes Not Prozac." Simon
& Schuster. ISBN 141655615X
- Avena NM, Rada P, Hoebel BG.
Evidence for sugar addiction: behavioral and neurochemical
effects of intermittent, excessive sugar intake. Neurosci Biobehav
Rev. 2008;32(1):20-39. Epub 2007 May 18.
A diet promoting sugar dependency causes behavioral
cross-sensitization to a low dose of amphetamine. Neuroscience.
2003;122(1):17-20.
- Avena NM, Long KA, Hoebel BG.
Sugar-dependent rats show enhanced responding for sugar after
abstinence: evidence of a sugar deprivation effect. Physiol Behav.
2005 Mar 16;84(3):359-62.
- Blass, E., E. Fitzgerald, and P. Kehoe, Interactions between
sucrose, pain and isolation distress. Pharmacol Biochem Behav,
1987. 26(3): p. 483-9.
- Blass, E.M. and A. Shah, Pain-reducing properties of sucrose in
human newborns. Chem Senses, 1995. 20(1): p. 29-35.
- Carlo Colantuoni, Pedro Rada,, Joseph McCarthy, Caroline
Patten, Nicole M. Avena, Andrew Chadeayne and Bartley G. Hoebel.
Evidence That Intermittent, Excessive Sugar Intake Causes
Endogenous Opioid Dependence. Obesity Research 10:478-488
(2002)
- Cleary, J., et al., Naloxone effects on sucrose-motivated
behavior. Psychopharmacology (Berl), 1996. 126(2): p. 110-4.
- Colantuoni C, Schwenker J, McCarthy J, Rada P, Ladenheim B,
Cadet JL, Schwartz GJ, Moran TH, Hoebel BG.
Excessive sugar intake alters binding to dopamine and mu-opioid
receptors in the brain. Neuroreport. 2001 Nov
16;12(16):3549-52.
- Czirr, S.A. and L.D. Reid, Demonstrating morphine's
potentiating effects on sucrose-intake. Brain Res Bull, 1986.
17(5): p. 639-42.
- D'Anci, K.E. and R.B. Kanarek, Naltrexone antagonism of
morphine antinociception in sucrose- and chow-fed rats. Nutr
Neurosci, 2004. 7(1): p. 57-61.
- d'Anci, K.E., R.B. Kanarek, and R. Marks-Kaufman, Duration of
sucrose availability differentially alters morphine-induced
analgesia in rats. Pharmacol Biochem Behav, 1996. 54(4): p.
693-7.
- Drewnowski, A. and M.R. Greenwood, Cream and sugar: human
preferences for high-fat foods. Physiol Behav, 1983. 30(4): p.
629-33.
- Drewnowski, A., et al., Taste responses and preferences for
sweet high-fat foods: evidence for opioid involvement. Physiol
Behav, 1992. 51(2): p. 371-9.
- Drewnowski, A., et al., Naloxone, an opiate blocker, reduces
the consumption of sweet high-fat foods in obese and lean female
binge eaters. Am J Clin Nutr, 1995. 61(6): p. 1206-12.
- Erlanson-Albertsson, C., [Sugar triggers our reward-system.
Sweets release opiates which stimulates the appetite for
sucrose--insulin can depress it]. Lakartidningen, 2005. 102(21): p.
1620-2, 1625, 1627.
- Fantino, M., J. Hosotte, and M. Apfelbaum, An opioid
antagonist, naltrexone, reduces preference for sucrose in humans.
Am J Physiol, 1986. 251(1 Pt 2): p. R91-6.
- Fullerton, D.T., et al., Sugar, opioids and binge eating. Brain
Res Bull, 1985. 14(6): p. 673-80.
- Kampov-Polevoy, A.B., et al., Sweet preference predicts mood
altering effect of and impaired control over eating sweet foods.
Eat Behav, 2006. 7(3): p. 181-7.
- Kanarek, R.B., S. Mandillo, and C. Wiatr, Chronic sucrose
intake augments antinociception induced by injections of mu but not
kappa opioid receptor agonists into the periaqueductal gray matter
in male and female rats. Brain Res, 2001. 920(1-2): p. 97-105.
- Laeng, B., K.C. Berridge, and C.M. Butter, Pleasantness of a
sweet taste during hunger and satiety: effects of gender and "sweet
tooth". Appetite, 1993. 21(3): p. 247-54.
- Leventhal, L., et al., Selective actions of central mu and
kappa opioid antagonists upon sucrose intake in sham-fed rats.
Brain Res, 1995. 685(1-2): p. 205-10.
- Levine, A.S., C.M. Kotz, and B.A. Gosnell, Sugars and fats: the
neurobiology of preference. J Nutr, 2003. 133(3): p.
831S-834S.
- Levine, A.S., et al., Opioids and consummatory behavior. Brain
Res Bull, 1985. 14(6): p. 663-72.
- Rada P, Avena NM, Hoebel BG.
Daily bingeing on sugar repeatedly releases dopamine in the
accumbens shell. Neuroscience. 2005;134(3):737-44.
- Schoenbaum, G.M., R.J. Martin, and D.S. Roane, Relationships
between sustained sucrose-feeding and opioid tolerance and
withdrawal. Pharmacol Biochem Behav, 1989. 34(4): p. 911-4.
- Spangler R, Wittkowski KM, Goddard NL, Avena NM, Hoebel BG,
Leibowitz SF.
Opiate-like effects of sugar on gene expression in reward areas
of the rat brain. Brain Res Mol Brain Res. 2004 May
19;124(2):134-42.
External
links