The Relationship between Sugar and Behavior in Children
The effect
of sugar intake on children’s behavior is a hotly debated topic in pediatrics.
Parents and educators often contend that sugar and other carbohydrate ingestion
can dramatically impact children’s behavior, particularly their activity
levels Physicians, on the other hand,
have looked at controlled studies of sugar intake and have not found
hypoglycemia or other blood sugar abnormalities in the children who are
consuming large amounts of sugar. So how do sugar and behavior go together?
An
interesting article appears in the February 1995 edition of the Journal of Pediatrics. In
contrast with other research teams, William Tamborlane, M.D.et al, of Yale
University report a more pronounced response to a glucose load in children than
in adults.
It
is commonly acknowledged that as blood glucose levels fall, there is a
compensatory release of adrenaline. When the blood glucose level falls below
normal, the resulting situation is called hypoglycemia. Signs and symptoms that
accompany this include shakiness, sweating, and altered thinking and behavior.
Tamborlane and his colleagues
demonstrated that this adrenaline release occurs at higher glucose levels in
children than it does in adults. In children it occurs at a blood sugar level
that would not be considered hypoglycemic. The peak of this adrenaline surge
comes about four hours after eating. The authors reason that the problem is not
sugar, per se, but highly refined sugars and carbohydrates, which enter the
bloodstream quickly and produce more rapid fluctuations in blood glucose
levels.
A recent study supports the
idea that a breakfast with a lower sugar load may improve short-term memory and
attention span at school (Physiol
Behav, 2007; 92: 717-24). Giving your child a breakfast which contains
fiber (oatmeal, shredded wheat, berries, bananas, whole-grain pancakes, etc.)
instead of loads of refined sugar should keep adrenaline levels more constant
and make the school day a more wondrous and productive experience. Packing
her/his lunch box with delicious fiber containing treats (whole-grain
breads, peaches, grapes, a myriad of other fresh fruits, etc.) may turn
afternoons at home into a delight.
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