WASHINGTON, April 20, 2009

Can Unhealthy Food Hijack Your Brain?

Former FDA Chief's Research Suggests Millions Suffer From "Conditioned Hypereating"

  • Former FDA Commissioner David Kessler poses at his home in San Francisco, Monday, April 20, 2009.

    Former FDA Commissioner David Kessler poses at his home in San Francisco, Monday, April 20, 2009.  (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

  • Interactive Diet And Nutrition

    Are you eating right? See the government's guidelines, calculate your body mass index and quiz yourself on healthy food choices.

  • Interactive Food Pyramid

    The government's latest guidelines for healthy eating get personal.

(AP)  Food hijacked Dr. David Kessler's brain.

Not apples or carrots. The scientist who once led the government's attack on addictive cigarettes can't wander through part of San Francisco without craving a local shop's chocolate-covered pretzels. Stop at one cookie? Rarely.

It's not an addiction but it's similar, and he's far from alone. Kessler's research suggests millions share what he calls "conditioned hypereating" - a willpower-sapping drive to eat high-fat, high-sugar foods even when they're not hungry.

In a book being published next week, the former Food and Drug Administration chief brings to consumers the disturbing conclusion of numerous brain studies: Some people really do have a harder time resisting bad foods. It's a new way of looking at the obesity epidemic that could help spur fledgling movements to reveal calories on restaurant menus or rein in portion sizes.

"The food industry has figured out what works. They know what drives people to keep on eating," Kessler tells The Associated Press. "It's the next great public health campaign, of changing how we view food, and the food industry has to be part of it."

He calls the culprits foods "layered and loaded" with combinations of fat, sugar and salt - and often so processed that you don't even have to chew much.

Overeaters must take responsibility, too, and basically retrain their brains to resist the lure, he cautions.

"I have suits in every size," Kessler writes in "The End of Overeating." But, "once you know what's driving your behavior, you can put steps into place" to change it.

At issue is how the brain becomes primed by different stimuli. Neuroscientists increasingly report that fat-and-sugar combinations in particular light up the brain's dopamine pathway - its pleasure-sensing spot - the same pathway that conditions people to alcohol or drugs.

Where did you experience the yum factor? That's the cue, sparking the brain to say, "I want that again!" as you drive by a restaurant or plop before the TV.

"You're not even aware you've learned this," says Dr. Nora Volkow, chief of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and a dopamine authority who has long studied similarities between drug addiction and obesity.

Volkow is a confessed chocoholic who salivates just walking past her laboratory's vending machine. "You have to fight it and fight it," she said.

Conditioning isn't always to blame. Numerous factors, including physical activity, metabolism and hormones, play a role in obesity.

And the food industry points out that increasingly stores and restaurants are giving consumers healthier choices, from allowing substitutions of fruit for french fries to selling packaged foods with less fat and salt.

But Kessler, now at the University of California, San Francisco, gathered colleagues to help build on that science and learn why some people have such a hard time choosing healthier:

First, the team found that even well-fed rats will work increasingly hard for sips of a vanilla milkshake with the right fat-sugar combo but that adding sugar steadily increases consumption. Many low-fat foods substitute sugar for the removed fat, doing nothing to help dieters eat less, Kessler and University of Washington researchers concluded.

Then Kessler culled data from a major study on food habits and health. Conditioned hypereaters reported feeling loss of control over food, a lack of satiety, and were preoccupied by food. Some 42 percent of them were obese compared to 18 percent without those behaviors, says Kessler, who estimates that up to 70 million people have some degree of conditioned hypereating.

Finally, Yale University neuroscientist Dana Small had hypereaters smell chocolate and taste a chocolate milkshake inside a brain-scanning MRI machine. Rather than getting used to the aroma, as is normal, hypereaters found the smell more tantalizing with time. And drinking the milkshake didn't satisfy. The reward-anticipating region of their brains stayed switched on, so that another brain area couldn't say, "Enough!"

People who aren't overweight can be conditioned hypereaters, too, Kessler found - so it's possible to control.

Take Volkow, the chocolate-loving neuroscientist. She's lean, and a self-described compulsive exerciser. Physical activity targets the dopamine pathway, too, a healthy distraction.

Smoking didn't start to drop until society's view of it as glamorous and sexy started changing, to view the habit as deadly, Kessler notes.

Unhealthy food has changed in the other direction. Foods high in fat, sugar and salt tend to be cheap; they're widely sold; and advertising links them to good friends and good times, even as social norms changed to make snacking anytime, anywhere acceptable.

Retrain the brain to think, "I'll hate myself if I eat that," Kessler advises. Lay down new neural reward circuits by substituting something else you enjoy, like a bike ride or a healthier food.

Make rules to resist temptation: "I'm going to the mall but bypassing the food court."

And avoid cues for bad eating whenever possible. Always go for the nachos at your friends' weekend gathering spot? Start fresh at another restaurant.

"I've learned to eat things I like but things I can control," Kessler says. But he knows the old circuitry dies hard: "You stress me enough and I'll go pick up that bagel."


By LAURAN NEERGAARD © MMIX, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 11 Comments
by boiler_tech April 21, 2009 2:14 PM EDT
Quit blaming the food industry for delivering what you want. Thank themfor your varied selection. You can buy a Twinkie for your snack craving. You can buy a fresh Hawaiian pineapple without being on the Islands. You can buy bacon without raising your own hog. You can buy soy milk without planting your own beans. Food companies are just like any other business. If consumers don't want what they sell, they either change or go bust. It's in your hands, or should I say wallet.
Reply to this comment
by filmguy107 April 21, 2009 1:00 PM EDT
Praise the Lard!
Reply to this comment
by mswolfestock April 21, 2009 1:00 PM EDT
Now you've gone and done it! I've got the munchies!!!!!!!

Chocolate covered pretzels? Heaven help me but now I'll probably think about them for the rest of the afternoon.

CBS - I think you're in cahoots with the snack food industry. LOL
Reply to this comment
by honestabe8 April 21, 2009 12:26 PM EDT
Sure., there is unhealthy stuff out there. The trick is not to overdo it.
Reply to this comment
by Henri_Rochard April 21, 2009 12:05 PM EDT
Ummmm... Chocolate chip cookies and Danish pastries taste better than carrots and broccoli.

I think our brains are wired to crave better-tasting food.
Reply to this comment
by mrs_entity April 21, 2009 8:54 AM EDT
Yes unhealthy food is brought to us by Satan in an effort to hijack our souls to lose the path of Jesus.
Reply to this comment
by sam-kiley April 21, 2009 7:21 AM EDT
c'est sur ..une mauvaise hygiéne alimentaire..a des répercussiions sur l'organisme en général y compris le cerveau..
ce qui a été dit ce matin sur le café est trés interessant..et tant mieux si monsieur "café" peut faire autant de bien....au revoir
Reply to this comment
by Snowhare April 21, 2009 4:59 AM EDT
Please can your unhelathy food!
So it will keep longer and hijack later.
Reply to this comment
by budmag06 April 21, 2009 1:03 AM EDT
You mean my Twinkies are bad for me?
Reply to this comment
by chezchas1 April 21, 2009 12:12 AM EDT
Nice zing, Freddy. Come on CBS, proofread your articles or at least proofread the headlines.
Reply to this comment
by FreddyBartholomew April 20, 2009 10:38 PM EDT
"Can Unhealthy Food Can Hijack Your Brain?"

Apparently so.
Reply to this comment
See all 11 Comments

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

  • MOST POPULAR
Discussed
  1. House Passes Landmark Health Care Bill

    (478 recent comments)

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: