After treating thousands of patients over the past few decades, it became obvious to me that poor dietary choices can adversely affect brain function, leading to a disease that I call Carbohydrate Associated Reversible Brain syndrome or CARB syndrome. When I talk to my friends in academic medicine like Dr. Richard Johnson, the well-known fructose researcher, they tell me that although they think I’m right, we need more studies to support the concept. After all, suggesting that certain dietary elements are causing reversible brain dysfunction is a rather radical concept.

As a working primary care physician, I am not in a position to do such research by myself, so I have been trying to convince people in academic medicine to do research on diet and brain function. Believe me, that’s not an easy thing to do. Because pharmaceutical companies sponsor most basic research, it’s hard to find funding for studies on diet and health. I guess we can’t really expect the food or agricultural industries to sponsor this type of research—they’re too busy making money and making us sick!

Recently my friend Dr. Robert Lustig sent me an article that strongly supports the CARB syndrome disease model. The article “Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome and Functional and Structural Brain Impairments in Adolescence” was recently published in the journal Pediatrics. This study is truly revolutionary, because for the first time it documents a clear connection between diet and poor brain function.

They looked at two groups of adolescents, one group with metabolic syndrome and one group who were metabolically healthy. The metabolic syndrome is a pre-diabetic state defined by insulin resistance, low HDL (good) cholesterol, elevated triglycerides, hypertension and abdominal obesity. Metabolic syndrome up until recently has been extremely rare in young adults, but over the past few decades it has become common in this age group.

Based on research by Dr. Johnson and others, it is now clear that metabolic syndrome is primarily driven by excessive intake of the simple sugar fructose, mainly in the form of sugar or high fructose corn syrup (HFCS). Dr. Johnson has shown when you consume more than 25 grams of fructose per day, your liver begins to fill up with fat, leading to insulin resistance. Excessive fructose also increases levels of uric acid, and high levels of uric acid plays a key role in turning on your fat storage switch. To learn more about the adverse affects of fructose, I highly recommend that you read Dr. Johnson’s “The Sugar Fix” and his recently published book “The Fat Switch” available at http://mercola.com.

This study showed that the group with metabolic syndrome had a form of brain dysfunction. They had problems concentrating and focusing and their ability to perform various mental tasks was impaired. They also documented that those with metabolic syndrome had structural changes in their brains. For years we have known that diabetics suffer from similar changes in their brains, and it is now clear that the brain takes a hit long before a person develops full-blown diabetes. Our children are losing brain function because they are eating a standard American diet? This is a story that deserves to be splashed in the headlines across the world.

Sugar and HFCS don’t appear to be the only bad actors when it comes to diet and poor brain function. High glycemic carbohydrates, especially from grains, also seem to play a role in food-induced brain dysfunction or CARB syndrome. When you have insulin resistance and eat a Twinkie or similar high glycemic carbohydrate, your brain is exposed to large glucose spikes. Although neurons rely almost exclusively on glucose for their energy needs, too much glucose can damage nerve cells. That’s because unlike other cells in your body, insulin isn’t required for glucose to enter into nerve cells. When you have a glucose spike in your blood, you also have a glucose spike inside of every neuron in your body.

In this situation the glucose must be used by the mitochondria to produce energy and too much glucose releases a massive amount of free radicals, overwhelming your inherent anti-oxidant system. This leads to a condition called mitochondrial dysfunction where your mitochondria no longer function as intended. Glucose spikes also seem to lead to neurotransmitter dumping, a condition where your neurons dump out too many key neurotransmitters like dopamine, norepinephrine and serotonin. These valuable chemical messengers are normally reabsorbed by the neuron to be reused. When too many of these neurotransmitters are released at once, the reuptake system simply can’t handle the load and most of them are taken up by your blood stream and cleared by your kidneys. In other words, when you eat that Twinkie, you end up peeing away your dopamine, norepinphrine and serotonin.

When you binge on Twinkies or similar fare, you end up with a brain that is depleted of these important chemical messengers. This results in the 22 brain dysfunction symptoms that are typical of CARB syndrome. The first symptom you develop with CARB syndrome is craving for sweet and starchy foods, pushing you to consume more of the very food that is frying your brain. Is it any wonder that many of our children seem to have problems learning and functioning in an academic environment? Hiring more teachers and throwing more money at the problem will have no impact as long as we allow are children to eat this type of toxic food.

Although you may not have much control over many things in our complex modern world, you do have control over what you put in your mouth and what you feed your children. Forget about calories, because they are not relevant to the problem at hand. Focus on food composition. Eat real food, not processed food. If it has a food label, you probably shouldn’t be eating it. Eat meat, fowl, fish, seafood, vegetables, nuts and fruit. Stay away from all processed foods, sugar and HFCS. It’s a simple, not complex approach to the problem. You just need to start doing it.