We may learn best on an empty stomach!
Researchers at Yale School of Medicine have found
evidence that a hormone produced in the stomach directly
stimulates the higher brain functions of spatial
learning and memory development, and further suggests
that we may learn best on an empty stomach.
Published in Nature Neuroscience by investigators at
Yale and other institutes, the study showed that the
hormone ghrelin, produced in the stomach and previously
associated with growth hormone release and appetite, has
a direct, rapid and powerful influence on the
hippocampus, a higher brain region critical for learning
and memory.
The team, led by Tamas L. Horvath, chair and associate
professor of the Section of Comparative Medicine at Yale
School of Medicine, and associate professor in the
Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive
Sciences, and Neurobiology, first observed that
peripheral ghrelin can enter the hippocampus and bind to
local neurons promoting alterations in connections
between nerve cells in mice and rats. Further study of
behavior in the animals showed that these changes in
brain circuitry are linked to enhanced learning and
memory performance.
Because ghrelin is highest in the circulation during the
day and when the stomach is empty, these results also
indicate that learning may be most effective before
meal-time.
"Based on our observations in animal models, a practical
recommendation could be that children may benefit from
not overeating at breakfast in order to make the most
out of their morning hours at school," said Horvath.
"The current obesity epidemic among American school
children, which to some degree has been attributed to
bad eating habits in the school environment, has been
paralleled by a decline of learning performance. It is
however too early to speculate if hormonal links between
eating and learning are involved in that phenomenon."
Horvath said that high ghrelin levels or administration
of ghrelin-like drugs could also protect against certain
forms of dementia, because aging and obesity are
associated with a decline in ghrelin levels and an
increased incidence of conditions of memory loss like
Alzheimer's disease.