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Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Can Skipping Processed Foods Prevent Alzheimer's?

This is the full article. If skipping processed foods can possibly prevent Alzheimer's it stands to reason doing so can also help slow the progress IMO:

New York Times food writer and health advocate Mark Bittman reports that since 2005, it’s been widely suspected that Alzheimer’s is actually just “Type 3 diabetes”. But findings from recent studies also suggest that like other forms of diabetes, this “brain disease” could be controllable through better food choices.

There are currently two main types of diabetes, according to the Times. Type 1 usually develops in childhood, has no known cause and accounts for about ten percent of all cases. But Type 2 is diet-induced and is caused by ingesting large quantities of hyperprocessed foods. It used to be called “adult-onset diabetes” until it became prevalent in children who ate that same sugary, nitrate-laden diet.

In 2005, the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease published a study which found that Alzheimer’s patients exhibited similar abnormalities in insulin as other diabetics, The Huffington Post reports. And recently, an article published in New Scientist, gives greater sway to the argument that like Type 2 diabetes, the brain disorder could be controlled through better food choices that keep insulin levels steady.

The reason why is fairly simple. Insulin regulates blood sugar in the body. When you consistently flood the body with hyperprocessed foods, the cells become overwhelmed by all that sugar and stop responding to insulin- a condition known as insulin resistance. The left over sugar is then allowed to run amok, causing inflammation and eventually ailments like heart disease, nerve damage, and ocular degeneration. According to The Huffington Post, when that damage finally reaches the brain, memory function is impaired, disorientation sets in, and according to some researchers, the patient develops Alzheimer’s.

Bittman writes that the American diet of hyperprocessed foods has caused rates of Type 2 diabetes to nearly triple in the last 40 years. Alzheimer’s too is expected to escalate rapidly in the near future, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. This one-two punch means that as our population ages and grows more obese, the effects on our mental health could be as devastating as those on our physical health.

Alzheimer’s used to be thought of as something that "just happened" to you by chance. But its link to insulin resistance means it might be regulated by keeping blood sugar levels steady. This means the usual prescription?a diet low in processed foods, saturated fats and sugar, and full of antioxidant-rich whole fruits and vegetables. And isn't that almost always the answer?to obesity, to diabetes, and now possibly, to Alzheimer’s.

What is good for the goose today will also be good for the gander tomorrow.