A
new study suggests that age-related changes in the brain start earlier in life
than previously thought, and switching diet may slow down the deterioration.
The
findings appear in the journal PNAS.
The
human brain needs over 20% of the body’s
energy to function, and it gets this from metabolizing either glucose or ketone bodies.
Hypometabolism
occurs when brain cells cannot use glucose as an energy source.
The
brain is vulnerable to changes in metabolism.
People
with Alzheimer’s disease often
experience a severe drop in
the brain’s glucose metabolic rate, and the extent of this reduction is
associated with the severity of their illness.
Alzheimer’s
disease is the most common form of dementia. According to the World Health Organization (WHO),
approximately 50 million people globally
have dementia, and about 60 to 70% of these
have Alzheimer’s disease.
While
scientists have been unable to pinpoint why the brain cells stop metabolizing
glucose at this point, previous research has shown that a drop in glucose
metabolism appears early before Alzheimer’s symptoms develop.
In
this study, researchers from the United States and the United Kingdom used the
stability of this communication network between brain regions as a way to
measure age-related changes in the brain.
They
set out to investigate when these changes start and whether a change in a person’s
diet from one rich in glucose to ketones could affect the communication between
these brain regions.
To
determine when these changes to neural stability emerge, the researchers used
two large-scale functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) datasets. One
dataset came from the Max Planck Institut Leipzig in Germany, and the other
from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (Cam-CAN) in Cambridge,
UK. The datasets contained brain scans of nearly 1,000 adults across their
life-span (ages 18 to 88).
This
type of brain scan measures the stability of brain networks, defined as the
brain’s ability to sustain functional communication between its regions.
Diet and brain activity
To
investigate how diet affects brain network stability, the researchers used an
fMRI machine scanner to measure the neural activity of 42 volunteers under 50
years old.
These
volunteers had spent a week following one of three diets: a regular diet, where
the primary fuel metabolized was glucose, a low-carbohydrate diet where the primary
fuel metabolized was ketones, or a regular diet with an overnight 12-hour
fasting.
The
researchers measured the volunteer’s ketone and glucose levels before and after
the scan.
To
ensure that the effect they observed was directly due to glucose or ketones,
the researchers carried out a second experiment with 30 volunteers. They asked
the participants to consume a calorie-matched glucose or ketone drink after an
overnight fast.
The
researchers found that the volunteer’s neural networks were destabilized by
glucose and stabilized by ketones.
This
happened in both the experiments, whether ketosis was generated naturally
through a low carbohydrate diet or artificially using ketone supplements.
The
researchers found that across a person’s life span, the destabilization of the
neural network had links with decreased brain activity and someone’s ability to
distinguish between the correct responses to situations known as cognitive
acuity.
When does the brain begin
to age?
The
study results suggested that changes to the stability of a person’s neural
network emerged at 47 years old, and the brain rapidly degenerated from 60
years old onward.
“The
bad news is that we see the first signs of brain aging much earlier than was
previously thought,” says Mujica-Parodi, a professor in the Department of
Biomedical Engineering.
The
researcher also has joint appointments in the College of Engineering &
Applied Sciences and Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University
in New York and is a faculty member in the Laufer Center for Physical and
Quantitative Biology.
“However,
the good news is that we may be able to prevent or reverse these effects with
diet, mitigating the impact of encroaching hypometabolism by exchanging glucose
for ketones as fuel for neurons.”
– Prof. Mujica-Parodi.
– Prof. Mujica-Parodi.
Source: Medical News Today
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