Posted on 03/28/2006 8:58:54 PM PST by MRMEAN
Chocoholics can happily eat chocolate for pleasure, but for those who are stressed and clinically depressed, the high is short-lived and chocolate may even deepen the downer, a review shows.
The findings, which will be published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, fly in the face of the myth that chocolate is an antidepressant.
The analysis, which is the most comprehensive literature review on how chocolate affects mood, shows that the motivation behind eating chocolate determines which neurotransmitters are activated, and hence your mood.
The review's Australian authors, from the Black Dog Institute at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Sydney, identified two groups of chocolate eaters based on motivation.
They identified the cravers, who eat chocolate as an indulgent pleasure, and the emotional eaters, who use chocolate in a bid to alleviate depression.
Professor Gordon Parker, executive director of the Black Dog Institute and lead author, says cravers see chocolate like a good glass of wine, and anticipating and eating the treat releases 'feel good' neurotransmitters.
"Chocolate craving as an indulgent pleasure seems to stimulate the dopamine system in the brain, and provides an enjoyable experience," he says.
"But the emotional eaters, people who eat chocolate to relieve boredom, stress or clinical depression, are looking for an opioid effect to improve their mood."
For them, at best chocolate only provides temporary relief, he says. But this is quickly followed by a return to or a worsening of their earlier negative state.
Consuming sweet foods is thought to release the neurotransmitter beta-endorphin in the hypothalamus, which is said to have an opiate effect on the body.
But why the chocolate high is so transient and insufficient to sustain mood in those who eat it for emotional reasons remains unknown.
Busting the myth
The theory that chocolate acts as an antidepressant comes from the common belief that a serotonin deficiency causes chocolate cravings, but the review found no support for this hypothesis.
"It is true that chocolate acts on the same neurological system as serotonin. But you'd have to eat a truck load of chocolate before you have had the equivalent of one antidepressant tablet," Parker says.
"Our review rejects any possibility that chocolate desired as a way of relieving stress or when feeling down has any antidepressant benefit."
Stimulants such as caffeine, theobromine, tyramine and phenylethylamine, are also present in concentrations too low to have any significant psychoactive effect, the review says.
For more information about depression, including fact sheets, support and referrals, see the websites for beyondblue, Australia's national depression initiative, and depressioNet.
And the down side is?
Shoot, I already eat TWO truckloads, to get enough theobromines to save buying asthma inhalers.
There really IS a reason fat people are jolly.
BTW, coming sometime next decade is my study, "Reasearchers Writing Pop-Culture Health Studies Are Likely to be Anal Retentive Spoilsports"
Well!
WELL!
The next knock on your door will be me! Homemade brownies beat Thin Mints ANY day of the week.
This can't be true?
You'd better hurry up. There is only 3/4 of the pan left. Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
You started about 10 minutes ago, didn't you?
DIDN'T you?
I'm telling!!!!
>Actually I munching on a homemade brownie. LOL
Mmmmmmmmmmmmm!<
Shoot! And here I'm off sweets for Lent!
"Solid milk chocolate at its smooth, creamy European best Coffee and Cream: Rich, coffee flavored dark chocolate, atop a white chocolate base Hazelnut-Almond: Delicate pieces of hazelnuts and almonds in smooth milk chocolate Hazelnut-Creme: Milk chocolate filled with a smooth, creamy hazelnut cream Dark Cream: Smooth, rich, melt-in-your-mouth dark chocolate Cream Truffle: Smooth dark chocolate with a creamy chocolate truffle center Praline-Creme: Luscious milk chocolate with a smooth chocolate praline center. Made in Germany."
I'm eating this chocolate right now. My brother got it at Aldi's supermarket and sent it to me. It's very good, but they're little 2" bars. I'm on my fifth one.
Oh yum! Personally I do the chocolate chip cookie route. Make em, bake em and hide em. (We're talking survival here.)
My favorite breakfast is a cup of coffee and a chunk of dark chocolate. Heaven on earth.
"But the emotional eaters, people who eat chocolate to relieve boredom, stress or clinical depression, are looking for an opioid effect to improve their mood."
Then why aren't opioids presctibed for depression?
,,, give me the chocolate and nobody gets hurt.
See post 18. I don't have that tagline anymore but it's still true. Chocolate will cure anything less than an audit.
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