The Root of the problem
If you are sugar sensitive, there are three things in your body chemistry that contribute to the "crazy" feelings:
- the level of sugar in your blood
- the level of chemical serotonin in your brain
- the level of the chemical beta-endorphin in your brain
The level of sugar in your blood
Your body uses a very simple for of sugar called glucose as its basic fuel. During digestion all the carboyhydrates you eat are broken down into glucose. It is carried by the blood throughout your body to be used as energy by the cells as needed. All your cells, particularly those in your brain, require a steady supply of sugar at all times.
When your body has the optimal level of sugar in the blood to supply your cells, you feel good. When your blood sugar level is too low, your cells don't get the sugar they need and they start sending out distress signals. These distress signals are the symptoms of low blood sugar, a condition known as hypoglycemia.
Brain Chemicals: Serotonin
In addition to blood sugar, a number of chemicals in your brain affect how you feel and act. Serotonin is a brain chemical that is particularly important for sugar sensitive people. It creates a sense of relazation, and gives you a sense of being at peace with the world. Serotonin also influences your self-control, impulse control and ability to plan ahead.
When your serotonin level is low you may feel depressed, act impulsively and have intense cravings for alcohol, sweets, or carbohydrates. Scientists have worked hard to find ways to increase the level of serotonin in the brains of people who are depressed. The result is that the newer anti-depressants that do this - such as Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, and Effexor - have been dispensed to well over six million people.
Brain Chemicals: Beta-endorphin
Beta-endorphin is the brain chemical that's gotten the least attention in the diet, depression and addiction books. That's very strange because it is immensely powerful and can drive you inexorably towards deeper addiction, or raise your spirits to a level of health that you may have never known before.
When your beta-endorphin is low, you feel depressed, impulsive, and vicitmised. You may be touchy and tearful. Your self esteem is low. And you have a desperate craving for sugar. The scientific community has been investigating beta-endorphin for more than twenty years, but the public understanding of its effects has remained fairly limited. You may have heard of the "runner's high", a phrase that describes how the body responds to the pain of long-distance running by automatically flooding the body with beta-endorphin, which produces euphoria.
Stay tuned for the next article on how you can maintain balance of these three things...
When your body has the optimal level of sugar in the blood to supply your cells, you feel good. When your blood sugar level is too low, your cells don't get the sugar they need and they start sending out distress signals. These distress signals are the symptoms of low blood sugar, a condition known as hypoglycemia.
Brain Chemicals: Serotonin
In addition to blood sugar, a number of chemicals in your brain affect how you feel and act. Serotonin is a brain chemical that is particularly important for sugar sensitive people. It creates a sense of relazation, and gives you a sense of being at peace with the world. Serotonin also influences your self-control, impulse control and ability to plan ahead.
When your serotonin level is low you may feel depressed, act impulsively and have intense cravings for alcohol, sweets, or carbohydrates. Scientists have worked hard to find ways to increase the level of serotonin in the brains of people who are depressed. The result is that the newer anti-depressants that do this - such as Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, and Effexor - have been dispensed to well over six million people.
Brain Chemicals: Beta-endorphin
Beta-endorphin is the brain chemical that's gotten the least attention in the diet, depression and addiction books. That's very strange because it is immensely powerful and can drive you inexorably towards deeper addiction, or raise your spirits to a level of health that you may have never known before.
When your beta-endorphin is low, you feel depressed, impulsive, and vicitmised. You may be touchy and tearful. Your self esteem is low. And you have a desperate craving for sugar. The scientific community has been investigating beta-endorphin for more than twenty years, but the public understanding of its effects has remained fairly limited. You may have heard of the "runner's high", a phrase that describes how the body responds to the pain of long-distance running by automatically flooding the body with beta-endorphin, which produces euphoria.
Stay tuned for the next article on how you can maintain balance of these three things...

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