Science How obesity may harm memory and learning

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https://www.sciencenews.org/article/how-obesity-may-harm-memory-and-learning
Obesity can affect brainpower, and a study in mice may help explain how.

In the brains of obese mice, rogue immune cells chomp nerve cell connections that are important for learning and memory, scientists report September 10 in the Journal of Neuroscience. Drugs that stop this synapse destruction may ultimately prove useful for protecting the brain against the immune cell assault.

Like people, mice that eat lots of fat quickly pack on pounds. After 12 weeks of a high-fat diet, mice weighed almost 40 percent more than mice fed standard chow. These obese mice showed signs of diminished brainpower, neuroscientist Elizabeth Gould of Princeton University and colleagues found. Obese mice were worse at escaping mazes and remembering an object’s location than mice of a normal weight.

On nerve cells, microscopic knobs called dendritic spines receive signals. Compared with normal-sized mice, obese mice had fewer dendritic spines in several parts of the mice’s hippocampi, brain structures important for learning and memory.

The dendritic spine destruction comes from immune cells called microglia, the results suggest. In obese mice, higher numbers of active microglia lurked among these sparser nerve cell connections compared with mice of normal weights. When the researchers interfered with microglia in obese mice, dendritic spines were protected and the mice’s performance on thinking tests improved.

Figuring out ways to stop microglia’s damage might one day prove to protect against obesity-related brain trouble, a concern relevant to the estimated 650 million obese adults worldwide. Obese people are also at a higher risk of dementias such as Alzheimer’s, and some researchers suspect microglia may be a culprit in those brain diseases more generally.
Amberlynn and Chantal should take note
 
Exercising your body has positive effects on the mind, as well. Just jogging for half an hour a day can make you a more focused person.
 
I'm fine with people eating themselves into an early grave if they admit I'm not required to be attracted to them. Deal?
 
I'm not, because they're an incredibly huge drain on the healthcare system, even in mostly private systems like the US, and they can really fuck up nurses'/EMTs' bodies.
True. Although now you're getting into the discussion of what people are allowed to do with their bodies. Should things like smoking, alcohol, and unhealthy food be illegal because it contributes to the health system burden?

I guess a seemingly obvious solution would be forcing everyone to have health insurance but a certain someone really didn't approach that right...
 
I'm not, because they're an incredibly huge drain on the healthcare system, even in mostly private systems like the US, and they can really fuck up nurses'/EMTs' bodies.
The transmissions of ambulances are actually sustaining damage from shipping landwhales around constantly, and hospital beds need to be larger to fit some obeasts. A healthily sized human can be carried by two people, one if dragging isn't an issue. A whale needs four or more men to move them in a crisis. I've heard horror stories of death fats getting stuck in an apartment.
 
The transmissions of ambulances are actually sustaining damage from shipping landwhales around constantly, and hospital beds need to be larger to fit some obeasts. A healthily sized human can be carried by two people, one if dragging isn't an issue. A whale needs four or more men to move them in a crisis. I've heard horror stories of death fats getting stuck in an apartment.
I love the term "deathfat" for these fatties, it sounds like a prestige class in a jokey tabletop rpg.
 
True. Although now you're getting into the discussion of what people are allowed to do with their bodies. Should things like smoking, alcohol, and unhealthy food be illegal because it contributes to the health system burden?

I guess a seemingly obvious solution would be forcing everyone to have health insurance but a certain someone really didn't approach that right...
about 15% of americans are smokers, and another 15% alcoholics. whereas about 70% are either overweight or obese. way bigger problem. the government shouldn't be allowed to say 'no you can't do that' (although i'm not opposed to vice taxes), but there's nothing wrong with me saying they shouldn't do that since nobody has to listen to me.
 
about 15% of americans are smokers, and another 15% alcoholics. whereas about 70% are either overweight or obese. way bigger problem. the government shouldn't be allowed to say 'no you can't do that' (although i'm not opposed to vice taxes), but there's nothing wrong with me saying they shouldn't do that since nobody has to listen to me.
That's not getting into the age demographic problem. There are nearly as many old unhealthy people as there are young, healthy people. That combined with the profit motivated insurance companies means that rates will continue to climb.

If you're not rich in the U.S, don't bother with health or life insurance. You'll probably be richer if you put the money in a bank and accrue interest.
 
True. Although now you're getting into the discussion of what people are allowed to do with their bodies. Should things like smoking, alcohol, and unhealthy food be illegal because it contributes to the health system burden?

I guess a seemingly obvious solution would be forcing everyone to have health insurance but a certain someone really didn't approach that right...

That or just refuse medical services to fats, drunks, and smokers.
 
It would be interesting to see a comparison in cognition between a morbidly obese guy from Missippi and a malnourished vegan from California.
malnourished vegan from California because he likely grew up in a non-vegan middle class home with parents who cared about education and Mississippi guy likely didn't. obesity is correlated with poverty so I wonder if they took that into account.
 
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