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9 Top
Foods To Boost Your Brainpower
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Story at-a-glance
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Curry, celery, broccoli, cauliflower and walnuts contain
antioxidants and other compounds that protect your brain health and may
even stimulate the production of new brain cells
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Healthy fats, blueberries, red meat, crab and garbanzo
beans are also wonderful foods for brain health
-
Avoiding sugar and carbohydrates, including gluten, also
appears to be a fundamental factor in protecting your brain
By Dr. Mercola
If you could protect your brain against
degeneration, nourish your neurons and even boost the production of
neurotransmitters just by eating more delicious whole foods… would you do
it?
There's good news for those of you who said yes… you
certainly can boost
your brainpower with the foods you eat. And if you're wondering which foods
are best for your brain, check out the top nine below.
Eat More of These Top 9 Foods for Brainpower
1. Curry
Curry contains turmeric, a spice that in turn contains
the anti-inflammatory antioxidant curcumin. Curcumin is capable of
crossing the blood-brain barrier, which is one reason why it holds
promise as a neuroprotective agent in a wide range of neurological
disorders.
Research has shown that curcumin may help inhibit the
accumulation of destructive beta amyloids in the brain of Alzheimer's
patients, as well as break up existing plaques.1 Curcumin
has even been shown to boost memory and stimulate the production of new
brain cells, a process known as neurogenesis.
A word to the wise… some
curry powders
may contain very little curcumin compared to straight turmeric powder,
so choose the latter for the best health benefits.
2. Celery
Celery is a rich source of luteolin, a plant compounds
that may calm inflammation in your brain, which is a primary cause of
neurodegeneration. Luteolin has also been linked with lower rates of
age-related memory loss in mice.2 In
addition to celery, peppers and carrots are also good sources of
luteolin.
3. Broccoli and Cauliflower
Broccoli and cauliflower are
good sources of choline,
a B vitamin known for its role in brain development. Choline intake
during pregnancy "super-charged" the brain activity of animals in utero,
indicating that it may boost cognitive function, improve learning and
memory,
It may even diminish age-related memory decline and your
brain's vulnerability to toxins during childhood, as well as conferring
protection later in life.3 Eggs
and meat are among the best food sources of choline.
4. Walnuts
Walnuts are good sources of plant-based omega-3 fats,
natural phytosterols and antioxidants, and have been shown to reverse
brain aging in older rats. DHA, in particular, is a type of omega-3 fat
that's been found to boost brain function and even promote brain
healing, although it's more plentiful in
animal-based omega-3 sources, like krill, as opposed to walnuts.
5. Crab
One serving of crab contains more than your entire daily
requirement of phenylalanine, an amino acid that helps make the
neurotransmitter dopamine, brain-stimulating adrenaline and
noradrenaline and thyroid hormone, and may help fight Parkinson's
disease. Crab is also an excellent source of brain-boosting vitamin B12.
6. Garbanzo Beans (Chickpeas)
Garbanzo beans are one of the best food sources of
magnesium (aside from kelp and green leafy vegetables). Magnesium
citrate benefits
brain cell receptors to speed the transmission of messages, while also
relaxing blood vessels, which allows more blood flow to the brain.
7. Red Meat
Red meat like grass-fed beef is an excellent source of
vitamin B12, which is vital for healthy brain function. People with high
levels of markers for vitamin B12 deficiency are more likely to score
lower on cognitive tests, as well as have a smaller total brain volume,
which suggests a lack of the vitamin may lead to brain shrinkage.4
8. Blueberries
The antioxidants and other phytochemicals in blueberries
have been linked to improvements in learning, thinking and memory, along
with reductions in neurodegenerative oxidative stress. They're also
relatively low in fructose compared to other fruits, making them one of
the healthier fruits available.
9. Healthy Fats
Beneficial health-promoting fats that your body—and your
brain in particular—needs for optimal function include organic butter
from raw milk, clarified butter called organic grass fed raw butter,
olives, organic virgin olive oil and coconut oil, nuts like pecans and
macadamia, free-range eggs, wild Alaskan salmon, and avocado, for
example.
We've covered some of the best foods for
your brain, but equally important is what foods to avoid. In
the video above, Dr. David Perlmutter—probably the leading natural medicine
neurologist in the US, from my perspective—shares his insights into how to
protect your brain
health and
even prevent Alzheimer's disease using a key dietary strategy… namely, avoiding
sugar and carbohydrates, including gluten.
Gluten sensitivity is involved in most chronic disease,
including those affecting the brain, because of how gluten affects your
immune system. Unfortunately, many people, physicians included, still
believe that if you don't have celiac disease, gluten is fair game and you
can eat as much of it as you like. However, virtually
all of us are
affected to some degree.
This is because we all create something called zonulin in the
intestine in response to gluten. Gluten proteins, found in wheat, barley and
rye, makes your gut more permeable, which allows undigested proteins and gut
contents such as bacteria to get into your bloodstream that would otherwise
have been excluded. That then sensitizes your immune system and promotes
inflammation and autoimmunity.
Once gluten upregulates permeability in your gut, it then
becomes "leaky" and all manner of previously excluded proteins—including
casein and other dairy proteins—have direct access to your bloodstream,
thereby challenging your immune system and contributing to the loss of
self-tolerance, the very definition of autoimmunity.
According to Dr. Perlmutter, much of our current disease
burden, including brain diseases, stems from the fact that we are
contaminating our immune systems with proteins to which the human immune
system has never, in the history of humankind, been previously exposed to.
To learn more, I highly recommend Dr. Perlmutter's New
York Times best-selling
book, Grain
Brain.
A Healthy Lifestyle Equals a Healthy Brain
Your brain is not "programmed" to shrink
and fail as a matter of course as you age. We now know that every activity
in which you engage—be it exercise, the foods you eat, the supplements you
take, your personal relationships, your emotional state, your sleep
patterns—all of these factors dramatically influence your genetic expression from
moment to moment. And this, in turn, influences
your overall health and risk of disease.
Lifestyle strategies that promote neurogenesis and regrowth
of brain cells include the following. All of these strategies target a
specific gene pathway called BDNF or brain-derived neurotrophic factor,
which promotes brain cell growth and connectivity as demonstrated on MRI
scans.
-
Exercise. Physical activity
produces biochemical changes that strengthen and renew not only your
body but also your brain—particularly areas associated with memory and
learning.
-
Reduce overall calorie consumption, including intermittent
fasting.
-
Reduce carbohydrate consumption, including sugars and
grains.
-
Increase healthy fat consumption.
-
Increase your omega-3 fat intake and reduce consumption
of damaged omega-6 fats (think processed vegetable oils) in order to
balance your omega-3 to omega-6 ratio. I prefer krill oil to fish oil
here, as krill oil also contains astaxanthin,
which appears to be particularly beneficial for brain health. As
explained by Dr. Perlmutter, it belongs to the class of carotenoids, and
is very "focused" on reducing free radical-mediated damage to fat, and
your brain is 60 percent to 70 percent fat.
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