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Stress Feeds the Need for Comfort Food

Chemical link found between stress and cookie cravings

By Jessica Stillman

Reaching for the cookie jar at the first sign of bad news may actually be
healthy.

New research suggests that high-fat, high-carbohydrate comfort foods
actually fight stress by stemming the tide of stress-related hormones that
are released when people are acutely exposed to stress.

But there's a hitch.

Researchers say those same ingredients in your favorite comfort foods that
work to reduce stress and decrease stress hormones also pile on the
pounds around the waist and increase the risk of obesity when stress is
chronic. The researchers say that over the long haul habitual use of these
comfort foods may cause an increase in those same hormones, leading to
increased amounts of abdominal fat -- a risk factor for heart disease.

Comfort Food Fights Short-term Stress

In the study, which appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, researchers investigated the effects of comfort foods on
stressed-out rats.

They found that when rats exposed to stress ate foods high in
carbohydrates and fat, an unknown component in the foods acted like a
brake on the cascade of stress-related hormones, such as the steroid
cortisol, and hormones that are related to the "fight or flight" syndrome.

Stress sets off this syndrome and causes non-vital bodily functions to shut
down. Meanwhile, adrenaline levels increase, heart rate quickens, and the
immune system gets a boost.

Although this type of reaction is good if you're staring down a grizzly bear,
researchers say chronic exposure to stress puts the body into overdrive,
continuously stimulating these hormones, which can increase long-term
health risks.

In addition, researchers say that their findings suggest that this constant
exposure to stress can also trigger a potentially dangerous urge to indulge
in rich comfort foods.

"There is no doubt that eating high fat and carbohydrate comfort foods
cheers people up and may make them feel and function better," write
researcher Mary F. Dallman, of the University of California, San Francisco,
and colleagues.

"However, habitual use of these foods, perhaps stimulated by abnormally
elevated concentrations of cortisol as a consequence of underlying
stressors, results in abdominal obesity," they write. Unfortunately, this type
of obesity is strongly associated with type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular
disease, and stroke."

Researchers say occasionally indulging in mom's macaroni and cheese or
chocolate chip cookies is probably useful to relieve anxiety in the
short-term. But habitually using comfort foods to combat chronic stress is
likely to be bad for long-term health and could be contributing the current
epidemic of obesity in the U.S.
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