If the alarming statistics surrounding the so called obesity epidemic
have not convinced you of the dangers of a sugar packed diet, a new
study might have you thinking twice. Rats given a choice between highly
sweetened water and intravenous cocaine overwhelmingly favored the tasty
beverage. Their preference was just as intense whether the drinks was
sweetened with saccharine or sugar.



This finding, reported recently by graduate student Magalie Lenoir and
her colleagues at the University of Bordeaux in France, fuels growing
suspicions that for some people sweets could be as pleasurable and
addictive as habit forming drugs. As the goes, our hypersensitivity to
sweet taste evolved when sugar was scarce and an indicator of a high
energy meal. Excessive sugar in today's diets may over stimulate the
sweet receptors in the brain, leading to a loss of self-control
mechanisms and the risk of addiction.

Indeed, drugs and food activate similar reward pathways  in the brain. A
separate recent study showed that rats can become dependent on sugar,
exhibiting typical symptoms of addiction, including craving and both
behavioral and neurochemical signs of withdrawal.

The bigger surprise, notes Serge Ahmed, who designed the preference
experiment, is that  rats that were already experienced cocaine
"users" (they had learned to self-administer cocaine) still
opted for sweetened water over the drugs.

Ahmed is reluctant to generalize these results to human just yet; rather
than proving that sweets are more addictive than cocaine, his team might
have discovered that rats simply  cannot become addicted to drugs. This
explanation, Ahmed believes, would nonetheless have important
implications, suggesting that researchers should focus on the prefrontal
cortex and other more recently evolved brain areas found in humans and
other primates.



Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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