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Does Being Overweight Damage Your Brain?

Sep 22, 2009 : View Comments
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Sorry for the over the top headline, but the answer to the question appears to be yes…and please read this whole post, there is something really good at the end.

How Being Overweight Affects The Brain

Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh scanned the brains of 94 people over the age of 70. They were looking to see the differences in the brains of people who were of normal weight (BMI under 25), overweight (BMI 25-30), and obese (BMI over 30).

If you are 5 foot 10 and you weigh 220, you have a BMI of 31.6 and would be considered obese. If you are 5 foot 10 and weigh 180, your BMI is 25.8 and you would be considered overweight for purposes of the study. There are certain athletes with lot of muscle mass that make the BMI inaccurate, but for the rest of us it is a valid measurement.

If you are 5 foot 5 and weigh 155 pounds, you would be considered overweight. At 185, you would be considered obese.

Don’t let the fact that all participants were over 70 distract you; this shows the effects of being overweight over time.

The Scary Results

It turns out that Obese people have 8% less brain tissue than people of normal weight. Overweight people have 4% less brain tissue than people of normal weight.

According to Dr. Paul Thompson, a UCLA professor of neurology, “This represents ‘severe’ brain degeneration, that’s a big loss of tissue and it depletes your cognitive reserves, putting you at a much greater risk of Alzheimer’s and other diseases that attack the brain… But you can greatly reduce your risk for Alzheimer’s, if you can eat healthy and keep your weight under control.”

*Source: Raji CA, Ho AJ, Parikshak NN, Becker JT, Lopez OL, Kuller LH, Hua X, Leow AD, Toga AW, Thompson PM. Brain structure and obesity, Hum Brain Mapp 2009 Aug 6

Losing Weight is not Just About Looking Good

It is kind of sad that “looking good” is the number one motivation for losing weight, but if that does the trick, then great.

However, to me, this new research is way more important. There is nothing more important than having a brain that works. It affects everything in your life, especially the people around you.

There are also a plethora of studies showing that being overweight decreases short term memory, and for lack of better words – can make you stupider and lazier than you otherwise would be.

And in case you forgot, being overweight also increases your risk of heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and has been shown to inhibit sexual performance.

More Bad News

The parts of the brain that degenerated for overweight people are very important, it wasn’t brain mass that we can spare.

Here are the areas effected:

  • Frontal and temporal lobes: Critical for planning and memory
  • Anterior cingulate gyrus: Responsible for attention and executive functions
  • Hippocampus: Important for long-term memory
  • Basal ganglia: Essential for proper movement and coordination

Furthermore, the brains of overweight people looked 8 years older than those of people of normal weight, and the brains of obese people looked a whopping 16 years older!

It is All About Eating

I hope that this article has helped motivate you to get to a normal weight if you aren’t already there. I think you probably know that there is really only one thing you can do in order to get there, and that is to eat the right foods at the right portions.

Exercise can help, but recent research demonstrates that exercise plays a much smaller role than calorie consumption. In fact, it can hurt your weight loss efforts if you aren’t careful because people seem to overestimate how much more they can eat after exercising.

So when you do exercise, make sure to track the calories burned and do not eat any more “extra” than what you have used. I am not saying not to exercise – just don’t exaggerate the effects in your mind.

Do You Have the Willpower?

If you have the desire to get to a normal weight and for whatever reason just can’t seem to get yourself to eat right, then you are not alone. Only about 5% succeed in losing weight over the long term.

These habits are hard to break, and we just aren’t designed to “not eat” the food that is around us. In this case, abundance is a double edge sword!

Furthermore, willpower is kind of a myth. We consciously only have the ability to exhibit conscious self control in one area at a time. I have written about the cookie study before, but I think it is worth repeating (in a very short form).

Subjects were brought into a room and asked to solve some brain puzzles. Another group was brought into the same room and asked to solve the same brain puzzles, but in this case they had a plate of cookies in front of them – and were told that they could not eat them!

The group that had to “not eat the cookies” performed dramatically worse than the group without cookies.

*Source: RE Baumeister, E Bratslavsky, M Muraven, and DM Tice. “Ego Depletion: Is the Active Self a Limited Resource?” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol. 74, 1998.

This means that when you are trying to avoid “bad” foods, it affects just about every other aspect of your day. So when a bit of stress hits, bye, bye diet.

So unless you have a stress free life, or amazing self control – changing your eating habits consciously is a tough road.

There is Hope

This is leading somewhere! If you can’t make the change consciously, then you have to make these changes unconsciously. A great strategy for nudging your unconscious mind in the right direction is to control your environment. Get rid of the bad foods in your house and workplace. Put reminders on the refrigerator, plan and prepare your meals ahead of time, etc… the more you can do with your environment to prime your unconscious mind the better.

And if this isn’t enough, try hypnosis. Hypnosis is the ONLY scientifically validated method for training your unconscious mind to eat right (and this is without using willpower – which just doesn’t work). Hypnosis works at a totally different level in the brain. It actually works at the level of self image.

A Tool You Can UseAfter reading this post, I thought you would be interested in being able to find your own BMI.  Here is a great resource.  Just type in your height and weight.

 

http://www.nhlbisupport.com/bmi/

Also, please comment on the research at the beginning of this article – I respond to all posts.

Tags: Alzheimer, BMI, brain loss, disease, Hypnosis, Obesity, Overweight, The Brain, Weight Loss
  • TheJavaGal
    Came across your article by accident, and really enjoyed it. There is so much more to learn about the brain. Most of us do things unconsciously that do not protect brain health. After spending years as caregiver for my Dad with Alzheimer's Disease, preserving brain function is high on my list of activities. I believe that a side benefit to properly caring for the brain is an overall improvement to health.

    We can say "Oh no, one more piece of bad news" or it can motivate us to say "Enough is enough, I start today to actively change my lifestyle, even if I need to get help in doing it.

    I have bookmarked this very important piece of beginning research, and will be sharing it with others. Thank you for the great article.
  • barbsjo
    I loved this article and found it most intresting .. it actually made a shift in my head for me... thank you thank you
  • Ellly
    If i loose those extra 8 kilos.....will my minds brain power return to normal
    if there is such a thing that is.
  • Ellly
    oh dear , am over weight, ---

    can still do suduku.......hope for me yet.
  • Jamie
    I promise you I cannot be Hypnotised.. I have a very strong mind, with the exception of passing up food.
  • Fredrik
    This is interesting... we are not designed to be overweight! We are not designed to live the way that makes us overweight.
  • Sherry
    I could not tell from the article, but I assume that this brain degeneration is permanent? With weight loss, does the age of the brain, memory functions, etc improve?
  • Dianne
    As the study is of people over 70 can the researchers be sure that the brain shrinkage is caused by being too fat or because the age of the participants being over 70 has caused the brain shrinkage. What about other confounding factors of alcohol consumption, cigarette smoking and other chronic diseases that naturally occur in the over 70's.
  • Reader
    It is sad that cause and effect were not addressed adequately in either the your article and perhaps the study itself (I haven't read that yet). Were the subjects' brains measured before they began gaining excess weight, or at birth, if they have always been overweight?
  • Michael Kruse
    Unfortunately, without more details about the study, it's difficult for a reader to judge of what value it really is. Are you saying, for example, that obese people over the age of 70 have 8% smaller brains than normal weight people over 70? Well, of course they have, because the rest of their bodies are disprortionately bigger. Or did the study actually track obese people's brains over time, and record how their brains became absolutely smaller? Or did the study say that the obese have, literally, smaller brains, in which case, were the subjects controlled for other factors, such as height, etc. ? Just as it stands, this article may be genuinely very scary, or it may be scary nonsense.
  • Michael Lovitch
    Hi Michael, some good points. The point about body proportion is not especially relevant - brains ar brains. But the cause and effect question needs some follow up.
  • Dee
    I really didn't need to hear about any more problems that I'm going to have since I'm considered OBESE-I was just told I'm diabetic and have a thyroid problem and am also dealing with depression. Thanks so much for making my day SO much better...NOT!
  • derrick
    maybe you should try going for a walk it helped a lot of people
  • Theresa Vo
    Hmm, is it the chicken or the egg? Does this study conclusively determined that obesity cause brain mass loss? Or is it because of less brain mass that a person is predisposed to be overweight?
  • Michael Lovitch
    That is a good question and one it appears that researchers are looking at. I know they sorted out for people with various conditions - but it is a great lineof questioning
  • Michael Lovitch
    Hi Helen, It is different in the UK. In the U.S. anyone can become a "CHT" without any real testing or education, you can even get one by mail order. So it is important here to make sure the therapist has a real background in psychology.
  • Helen M
    Oh dear, this is a shameless post isn't it! Interesting research on the loss of brain mass, something more to worry about.

    I'm surprised at your recommendations as to therapists in the US who can help with weight loss. I am "just a "hypnotherapist"" but I see many clients for weight loss, almost all of them achieve very good results in 3 to 6 sessions. I combine direct suggestions in hypnosis with analysis work, releasing negative emotions and addressing and healing the causes of weight gain.

    I don't charge $200 per session either. Perhaps we are luckier in the UK!
  • Terry Z
    Helen M , How much do you charge ?

    What percentage success rates do you have ? How many failures?
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