Tripp 1: The Western Diet and Hippocampus: Where Breakfast and Brain Power Collide
Tripp 1: The Western Diet and Hippocampus: Where Breakfast and Brain Power Collide
Tripp 1: The Western Diet and Hippocampus: Where Breakfast and Brain Power Collide
Charlotte Tripp
V01004499
Tim Personn
ATWP135 – A11
The Western Diet and Hippocampus: Where Breakfast and Brain Power Collide
Lately, many busy Canadians have been found to prioritize convenience over health when
deciding on what to eat. Buying fast food and junk food has become standardized in North American
culture through the commonly consumed Western Diet Pattern (WPD). The Western Diet Pattern is
defined by a high daily intake of processed foods, carbohydrates, saturated fats, and refined sugars.
Health concerns also surround the low-fibre intake this diet includes as well (Kingsland, 2021). Citizens
of Canada and the United States have been found to most frequently display eating styles that fall under
this diet pattern. It developed in the 17 th century and has remained favored until present day, where
words like “deep-fried, drive-thru, and processed” are commonly associated with it now (Laudan, 2015).
Due to the lack of nutrients that are consumed within this diet, negative health effects can result very
easily, which disrupt the human body’s overall health and state of homeostasis. Not only affecting just
the body, the human brain and hippocampus are impaired as well. They also are at risk to face the
adverse effects that result from this diet (Laguipo, 2020). Specialists across Canada have published work
emphasizing the harm in which the WPD can cause for the body, along with its relation to the harm that
is done on general cognition. After observations were made on how the Western Diet Plan correlates
with the food served at The Cove on the UVic campus, questions arose surrounding the effect of
nutrients. This led to the primary research focus being covered in this writing, questioning how human
Notably, the nutrients within the food humans eat hold a strong power that can easily
manipulate the state of the human body’s general health. The Western Diet Pattern lacks vital nutrients
needed for a healthy, balanced, and sustainable diet. Understanding background information on how
the general health of the body is harmed from the Western Diet Pattern will strengthen the
comprehension needed to understand how human cognition is damaged. Kingsland (2021) discusses the
inflammation that arises in the gut and bowels as a result of regularly consuming the WPD, along with
the negative impact that it leaves on our gut microbiota. In more severe cases, gut infection and cancer
are also mentioned in the risks, further adding to the list of physical health concerns this diet causes.
Rakhra and colleagues (2020) emphasize the ongoing obesity epidemic in North America, and more
significantly, in the United States. They describe the risks of obesity to be life threatening, severe, and
rapidly increasing as a common cause of death among North Americans. Correlating with the obesity
epidemic, diabetes is another health concern that is becoming alarmingly common amongst North
Americans as well. Johnston (2021) illustrates the harm that is imposed on Canadians from diabetes, and
how the levels of diabetes are rising rapidly in Canada. The resulting effects of this diet choice that are
listed above represent how recent, accessible, Western diet culture has made harmful health conditions
easy to impose on oneself. These listed effects relate to the research question by providing context of
the general physical harm that can be done to humans from this diet pattern. The considered factors
listed above will also strengthen background knowledge known of the human body for the purpose of
answering the research question, surrounding the impact that is made on cognition.
Along with the impact on the body, this form of malnutrition harms some of the general
cognitive functions of the human brain (López-Taboada et al., 2020). Research done by Laguipo (2020)
describes how the WPD effects the brains normal appetitive control, patterns of addiction, memory, and
stress. She references studies done by various universities to support her claim of how this diet pattern
harms the area of the brain that is responsible for various crucial cognitive functions, the hippocampus.
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Work published by López-Taboada and colleagues (2020) connects to the harm done to the body by
discussing the obesity epidemic and the gut as well. Stress is listed to be a leading cause in the
disruption of ability to access self-control, and multiple regions of the brain are described to be
negatively impacted from this diet. Understanding the different ways in which the cognition is harmed is
also significant for understanding the narrow focus of the hippocampal harm being done. This will add
further background knowledge on the general cognition now, to further advance the research.
Specifically highlighting the area of the brain that is most frequently linked with direct harm
done from the WDP, the hippocampus (López-Taboada et al., 2020). The hippocampus is primarily
responsible for memory, spatial navigation, learning, and self-control (Dhikav & Anand, 2012). This
region of the brain is affected the most because of the decrease in hippocampal volume that can be
caused by the Western Diet (Jacka et al., 2015). Because the hippocampus controls such a large portion
of many significant functions that make up human cognition, preventing damage to it is crucial. Along
with the various functions of cognition that are controlled, the hippocampus also works with other areas
of the brain to carry out actions as complex as motor control. As briefly discussed earlier, the
hippocampus controls aspects of self-control tendencies by working with the hypothalamus (Jacka et al.,
2015). Hippocampal shrinkage can be considered a primary factor of cognitive impairment resulting
from the Western Diet and adds on to the growing list of physical damage that it causes. As the
hippocampal volume shrinks, the ability to produce memories becomes harder and intense levels of
stress may arise (Dhikav & Anand, 2012). Emphasis on its large role in cognition, the hippocampus facing
harm because of this diet has become a large health concern for North Americans. This phenomenon of
distress being put onto the brain provides further insight to a concluding answer of how human
cognition is specifically impaired from this diet, and greatly strengthens the research.
In conclusion, the human body and cognition both take a large, harmful, toll when eating along a
Western Diet Pattern. This diet pattern has led to epidemics of both obesity and diabetes and shrinks
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the general volume of the hippocampus. As a result of this diet, memory strength, self-control, and
physical health are put at a high risk for impairment. Found within the research done, the damaging
effects imposed from the Western Diet are severe, and only increasing in North America (Rakhra et al.,
2020). In context of the primary research question, a concluding answer to this question is illustrated
through the damage done to cognition where hippocampal volume shrinkage causes humans’ ability to
References
Dhikav, V., & Anand, K. S. (2012). Hippocampus in health and disease: An overview. Annals of Indian
Academy of Neurology, 15(4), 239. https://doi.org/10.4103/0972-2327.104323
Jacka, F. N., Cherbuin, N., Anstey, K. J., Sachdev, P., & Butterworth, P. (2015). Western diet is associated
with a smaller hippocampus: A longitudinal investigation. BMC Medicine, 13(1).
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-015-0461-x
Johnston, K. (2021, February 17). We need to talk about nutrition transition. Canadian Feed The
Children. Retrieved December 2, 2022, from
https://canadianfeedthechildren.ca/the-feed/nutrition-transition/
Kingsland, J. (2021, May 5). Does a western diet promote chronic gut infections? Medical News Today.
Retrieved November 30, 2022, from https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/does-a-
western-diet-affect-the-risk-of-chronic-gut-infection
Laguipo, A. B. B. (2020, February 20). What the western diet is doing to your brain. News. Retrieved
November 30, 2022, from https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200220/What-the-western-
diet-is-doing-to-your-brain.aspx
Laudan, R. (2015, June 1). The origin of the modern Western Diet. Scientific American. Retrieved
November 30, 2022, from https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-origin-of-the-
modern-western-diet/
López-Taboada, I., González-Pardo, H., & Conejo, N. M. (2020). Western diet: Implications for Brain
Function and behavior. Frontiers in Psychology, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.564413
Rakhra, V., Galappaththy, S. L., Bulchandani, S., & Cabandugama, P. K. (2020). Obesity and the Western
Diet: How We Got Here. Missouri medicine, 117(6), 536–538.