How fatty foods before surgery could affect your memory

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Recent research from The Ohio State University has found that eating foods high in fat just days before undergoing surgery could lead to memory issues due to an increased inflammatory response in the brain.

This reaction appears to be significant not only in older adults, traditionally more prone to such effects, but in young adults as well.

The study builds upon earlier work from the same laboratory, revealing an intriguing solution to combat these adverse effects.

It was discovered that taking a supplement of DHA, an omega-3 fatty acid, for a month before indulging in a high-fat diet and before surgery could safeguard against the memory problems associated with both the diet and the surgical procedure in both aged and young rats.

The researchers focused on the impact of a three-day high-fat diet on memory, particularly a type of fear-related memory. In older rats, this brief period of unhealthy eating was enough to impair memory for up to two weeks.

The same type of memory issue was observed in younger rats that consumed a high-fat diet and underwent surgery.

This suggests that the inflammation caused in the brain by both a high-fat diet and surgical stress could combine to exacerbate memory problems.

Ruth Barrientos, a senior author of the study, emphasized the importance of the timing between consuming a high-fat diet and undergoing surgery. Both events individually provoke an inflammatory response in the brain.

However, when they occur close together, the combined effect can significantly worsen, potentially leading to long-term memory issues.

This study, published in the journal Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, sheds light on how everyday lifestyle choices, like diet, can interact with medical procedures to impact brain health, particularly in the context of aging.

The research highlights the brain’s vulnerability to inflammation, especially as it ages, suggesting that even short-term dietary choices can prime the brain for more severe inflammatory responses to stressors like surgery.

In the experiment, rats were fed a diet high in saturated fats for three days before undergoing a procedure akin to exploratory abdominal surgery. This setup was designed to mimic the cognitive impairments observed in older individuals after surgery.

The study pinpointed the immune system receptor TLR4 as a key player in the inflammation and subsequent memory problems induced by the high-fat diet and surgery.

One of the study’s key findings was the different effects on two types of memory: contextual memory and cued-fear memory. Contextual memory, which is based in the hippocampus, and cued-fear memory, based in the amygdala, were tested using behavioral tasks.

Interestingly, the high-fat diet and surgery combination impacted both types of memory in older rats, with the impairment lasting longer than previously observed.

In younger rats, the combination only affected cued-fear memory, highlighting the amygdala’s unique vulnerability to dietary influences.

The protective effect of DHA supplementation against these inflammatory responses and memory deficits is a significant discovery from this research.

DHA’s ability to mitigate the adverse effects of a high-fat diet and surgery suggests it could be a valuable preventative treatment, especially for those aware they will be undergoing surgery and whose diets may not be ideal.

This study provides a crucial insight into the complex interactions between diet, surgical stress, and brain health, offering a potential pathway to safeguard memory function through nutritional interventions.

If you care about dementia, please read studies about low choline intake linked to higher dementia risk, and how eating nuts can affect your cognitive ability.

For more information about brain health, please see recent studies that blueberry supplements may prevent cognitive decline, and results showing higher magnesium intake could help benefit brain health.

The research findings can be found in Brain, Behavior, and Immunity.

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