Can some

people react to certain foods the same way an alcoholic or addict

gets “hooked” on their substance of choice? Yes, according to a new

study that will appear in the August 2011 print issue of Archives

of General Psychiatry. A research team at Yale University examined

links between food addiction symptoms and neural activation in 48

young women ranging from lean to obese. They found that persons

with an addictive-like eating behavior seem to have greater neural

activity in brain regions similar to substance

dependence.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>“Based on numerous

parallels in neural functioning associated with substance abuse and

obesity, theorists have proposed that addictive processes may be

involved in the etiology of obesity,” write the researchers. “As

predicted, elevated [food addiction] scores were associated with

greater activation of [brain] regions that play a role in encoding

the motivational value of stimuli in response to food

cues.”

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>The question, according

to boomer-generation brother and sister authors Dian Griesel, Ph.D.

and Tom Griesel, more specifically becomes, “Why do some people

react with addictive tendencies when seeing or tasting a milkshake,

candy bar or bag of chips yet not have a comparable reaction with a

carbohydrate like fresh fruit, for example? Does a juicy steak

produce addictive tendencies?” Their conclusion: These addictive

reactions are most likely the result of the plethora of refined

foods, modern packaged foods and un-natural combinations of foods

we have been increasingly exposed to over the last 40 years. “We

have no doubt that certain foods are addictive,” says Dian, who has

spent the past 15 years working with drug development companies.

“The real question is, ‘What is it that makes these foods so

addictive?’”

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Increasingly, the

scientific literature suggests that sugar consumption, in any form,

may be the culprit. The Griesels point out that our bodies are

perfectly capable of consuming, processing and thriving on

“natural” foods. However, it is these totally unnatural man-made

products that are causing the problems.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>“The rise of obesity and

other modern diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease,

diabetes, hypertension, high triglycerides and hypoglycemia, to

name a few—along with so-called ‘food addiction’—are all the end

result of consuming too many of these ‘engineered’ modern foods in

our daily diets,” the Griesels say.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Tom says, “These modern

foods are deliberately designed to stimulate and excite our taste

buds and brains. They all contain refined carbohydrates which,

after becoming nutritionally neutered via processing, are often

produced with refined sweeteners—both real and artificial, fats and

problematic trans-fats, unnaturally high amounts of dietary omega-6

fatty acids from vegetable and manufactured oils, salt, a

cornucopia of artificial chemicals, dyes and additives that make

these packaged items lethal to our health and addictive to

many.”

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>“Manufacturers would like

us to believe that if it tastes good, it can’t be that bad. They

often use marketing tricks or artificial food dyes to fool

consumers into thinking that this stuff is healthier than it is,”

says Tom Griesel.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>The Griesels’ conclusion:

Refined and processed foods are hazardous to our health,

particularly to those who have increased sensitivity to them. Work

on satisfying your urges and cravings with the whole natural foods

we were all designed to eat. Eat some fruit when the sweet craving

strikes.

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