{"id":6058,"date":"2012-06-28T19:51:48","date_gmt":"2012-06-29T02:51:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/?p=6058"},"modified":"2013-06-25T08:58:05","modified_gmt":"2013-06-25T15:58:05","slug":"vegetarians-have-smaller-brains","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/2012\/06\/28\/vegetarians-have-smaller-brains\/","title":{"rendered":"Vegetarians have smaller brains"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>by Barry Groves<\/div>\n<div><a href=\"http:\/\/www.second-opinions.co.uk\/vegetarians-have-smaller-brains.html\">Source<\/a><\/div>\n<h2>If you want to get ahead, get a brain<\/h2>\n<p>There is overwhelming evidence that we can not be a vegetarian  species. In 1972 the publication of two independent investigations  confirmed this.[1] [2] They concerned fats. About half our brain and  nervous system is composed of complicated, long-chain, fatty acids.  These are also used in the walls of our blood vessels. Without them we  cannot develop normally. These fatty acids do not occur in plants,  although fatty acids in a simpler form do. This is where plant-eating  herbivores come in. Over the year, the herbivores convert the simple  fatty acids found in grasses and seeds into intermediate, more  complicated forms. By eating the herbivores we can convert their stores  of these fatty acids into the ones we need.<\/p>\n<p>About 2.5 million years ago animal foods began to occupy an  increasingly prominent place in our ancestors&#8217; menus. Smaller molar  size, less robust facial muscles and alterations in incisor shape from  that time all suggest a greater emphasis on foods such as meat that  require less grinding and more tearing.<\/p>\n<p>An increasing proportion of meat in the diet would obviously have  provided more animal protein, a factor perhaps related to the increase  in stature which appears to have accompanied the transition from <em>Australopithecines<\/em> through <em>Homo habilis<\/em> to <em>Homo erectus<\/em>.[3]  But greater availability of animal fat was probably a more important  dietary alteration. Crude stone tools allowed early humans to break  bones and allowed them access to brain and marrow fats from a broad  range of animals obtained by scavenging or hunting. These and other  carcass fats were probably as prized by early hominids as they are by  modern human hunter-gatherers.[4] Not only did more animal fat in the  diet mean considerably more energy, it was also a source of ready-made,  long-chain, polyunsaturated fatty acids, including omega-6 arachidonic  acid (AA), omega-3 docosatetraenoic acid (DTA) and omega-3  docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). These 3 fatty acids together make up over  90% of the fatty acids found in the brain matter of all mammalian  species.[5]<\/p>\n<p>Our brain is considerably larger than that of any ape. Looking  back at the fossil records from early hominids to modern man, we see a  remarkable increase in brain size from 375-550 ml at the time of <em>Australopithecus<\/em>, to 500-800 ml in <em>Homo habilis<\/em>, 775-1,225 ml in <em>Homo erectus,<\/em> and 1,350 cc in modern humans (<em>Homo sapiens<\/em>).  While there is still speculation about why this should have happened,  this increase in brain size could not have been supported  physiologically without an increased intake of preformed long-chain  fatty acids which are an essential component in the formation of brain  tissue.[6] It would never have occurred if our ancestors had not eaten  meat \u2014 with its fat. Human breast milk contains the fatty acids needed  for large brain development, cow&#8217;s milk does not. It is no coincidence  that, in relative terms, our brain is some 50 times the size of a cow&#8217;s.<\/p>\n<h3>Where does the energy for our brain come from?<\/h3>\n<p>Between 20% and 25% of all the energy we use, is used by our brain.  This is in contrast to the great apes whose brains use only about 8%.  This makes our brains very expensive in energy terms. It means that our  energy use compared to our body size should be considerably higher than  that of other animals. Yet it isn&#8217;t. This presents something of a  puzzle: where do we humans get the extra energy to spend on our large  brains? Researchers WR Leonard and ML Robertson concluded that the  evolution of brain size imply changes in diet quality during hominid  evolution. They say,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>&#8216;The shift to a more calorically dense diet was probably needed in order  to substantially increase the amount of metabolic energy being used by  the hominid brain. Thus, while nutritional factors alone are not  sufficient to explain the evolution of our large brains, it seems clear  that certain dietary changes were necessary for substantial brain  evolution to take place.'[7]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This confirms the Crawfords&#8217; work. While our enlarged brain was  made necessary by our banding together into tighter communities with  more individuals and, thus, a necessity to remember more individuals,  what made it possible was a diet of sufficient quality to allow that  brain expansion.<\/p>\n<p>But there is another aspect. Two scientists, Aiello and Wheeler,  measured the sizes of brains and other body organs against organ size  relative to body size predictions.[8] What they found was that the  larger-than-expected size of the human brain was compensated for by a  smaller-than-expected gut size. Measuring the other energy-expensive  organs in the body: heart, kidneys, liver, and gastrointestinal tract,  as these use the most energy after the brain, and comparing those of a  65-kg non-human primate with the organ sizes of an average 65-kg human,  they found dramatic differences between the expected and actual sizes of  the human brain, and gut: &#8216;the splanchnic [abdominal\/gut] organs were  approximately 900g less than expected&#8217;. Almost all of this shortfall was  due to our gut being only about 60% of that expected for a  similar-sized primate.<\/p>\n<h3>We have a carnivore gut<\/h3>\n<p>Not only is our gut smaller than predicted compared with other  primates, it is also configured very differently. Our small intestine is  the major organ used to digest food and extract its nutrients for  absorption into our bodies. Not surprisingly, it is more than 50% of the  total volume of our gut. Our colon (large intestine) plays little part  in the process of digestion: it is used mainly to extract and, so  conserve, water. For this reason, it represents only around 20% of our  gut&#8217;s volume. In contrast, the ratios in other primates are exactly the  opposite: The small intestines of orangs and chimps, which play a minor  role in digestion, are around 25% of gut volume, and their colons, where  bacteria are used to ferment plant fibre and where most digestion takes  place, are around 53% by volume.[9]<\/p>\n<p>This is not the only measurement that matters. So far I have  compared our gut to that of our primate cousins which eat mostly plant  food. If we also compare them to the great carnivores, we find that our  gut is actually very much like theirs. The comparisons are done with  respect to body weight as weight is closely related to the metabolic  energy requirements of an animal. This ratio, known as Kleiber&#8217;s Law,  expresses the relationship between body mass (weight) and the body&#8217;s  metabolic energy requirements. The size of any organ that is directly  concerned with metabolic turnover should comply with Kleiber&#8217;s law. If  we measure the size of these and they are in accordance with Kleiber&#8217;s  law, each part&#8217;s gastrointestinal (GI) quotient should be 1.00. A GI  greater than 1.00 means the organ is larger than expected, and GI less  than 1.00 indicates a size smaller than expected.<\/p>\n<p>In the gut, it is the surface area of various parts of the  digestive tract which determines their relative absorptive ability. A  test of major areas of the human digestive tract was published in 1985  with the following results:[10]<\/p>\n<div>\n<table border=\"3\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"4\" width=\"40%\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Stomach quotient<\/td>\n<td>0.31<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Small intestine quotient<\/td>\n<td>0.76<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Caecum quotient<\/td>\n<td>0.16<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Colon quotient<\/td>\n<td>0.58<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n<p>As these values are all considerably less than 1.00, it can only mean  one thing: for the absorption of sufficient energy and nutrients for  the body to function properly, food must be very energy and nutrient  dense. Fat meat is the only universal class of food that falls into this  category, thus there can be no doubt that humans fall into the  carnivore class.<\/p>\n<h3>Brain quotient<\/h3>\n<p>Our gut is not the only part of our bodies to be analysed in this  way. It is in our brain size and high intelligence that we humans are  unique. Relative to our body size, our brains are truly enormous. If we  measure our brain quotient in the same way we did for the gut, we can  get some idea of just how big it really is.<\/p>\n<p>In order to measure encephalization as it is called, statistical  models were developed which compared brain size and body size in a wide  range of species. This allowed an accurate estimation of the brain size  for a given species based on its body mass. This is important because it  allows the quantitative study and comparison of brain sizes between  different species by automatically adjusting for body size. For example,  elephants, which are plant eaters, and whales whether herbivores or  carnivores, have larger brains than we do \u2014 but they also have much  larger bodies. In this exercise it was noticed that the brain sizes of  these animals also followed Kleiber&#8217;s law.<\/p>\n<p>When this test was conducted on humans, it put humans right at  the very top of the primate scale. Our Encephalization Quotient was an  outstanding 28.8.<\/p>\n<p>With a brain so out of proportion to the rest of our bodies, it&#8217;s  not surprising that it uses such a large proportion of our total  energy. As brain size and energy use is so high, and our gut size so  small, the amount of energy available to the brain is dependent not only  on how the body&#8217;s total energy budget is allocated between the brain  and other energy-intensive organs and systems, but on the ability of our  gut to extract sufficient energy from our food. That also confirms that  the kind of diet we should eat must have the high nutrient density  found in foods such as meat and fat.<\/p>\n<h3>Our brains are now getting smaller<\/h3>\n<p>With such a small gut with which to absorb all the nutrients and  energy our bodies need, a modern low-calorie, low-fat, fibre-rich,  plant-based diet is woefully inadequate as an energy source for our  energy-hungry system to function at peak efficiency. That lack has begun  to show.<\/p>\n<p>Since the advent of agriculture, there has been a worrying trend  as our brains have actually decreased in size. A recently updated and  rigorous analysis of changes in human brain size found that our  ancestors&#8217; brain size reached its peak with the first anatomically  modern humans of approximately 90,000 years ago. That then remained  fairly constant for a further 60,000 years.[11] Over the next 20,000  years there was a slight decline in brain size of about 3%. Since the  advent of agriculture about 10,000 years ago, however, that decline has  quickened significantly, so that now our brains are a further 8%  smaller. That is a total of 11% smaller than at their peak size.<\/p>\n<p>This suggests some kind of recent historical deficiency in some  aspect of overall human nutrition. The most obvious and far-reaching  dietary change during the last 10,000 years is, of course, the enormous  drop in consumption of high-energy, fat-rich foods of animal origin  which formed probably over 90% of the diet, to as little as 10% today,  coupled with a large rise in less energy-dense grain consumption.[12]  This pattern still persists; it is even advocated today: it is the basis  of our so-called &#8216;healthy&#8217; diet.<\/p>\n<h3>Vitamin B-12<\/h3>\n<p>If any more convincing that we have to be a meat-eating species is  needed, there is one other essential nutrient that is not found in any  plant food. That nutrient is Vitamin B-12.<\/p>\n<p>Vitamin B-12 is unique among vitamins in that while it is found  universally in foods of animal origin, where it is derived ultimately  from bacteria, there is no active vitamin B-12 in anything which grows  out of the ground. Where trace amounts of vitamin B-12 are found on  plants it is there only fortuitously in bacterial contamination of the  soil. And even that is lost if plants are washed thoroughly before  eating them.<\/p>\n<p>Bacteria in the human colon make prodigious amounts of vitamin  B-12. Unfortunately, this is useless as it is not absorbed through the  colon wall. Dr. Sheila Callender tells of treating vegans with severe  vitamin B-12 deficiency by making water extracts of their stools which  she fed to them, thus affecting a cure.[13] An Iranian vegan sect  unwittingly also makes use of this fact. Investigators could not  understand how members of this sect remained healthy, until their  investigations showed that they grew their vegetables in human manure \u2014  and then ate the vegetables without being too fussy about washing them  first.[14]<\/p>\n<p>To enable vegans to survive, vitamin B-12 is added artificially to  breakfast cereals in Britain and may be bought in pill form. This is  hardly a natural way to get food and in many cases it is self-defeating.  Unlike most other vitamins, Vitamin B-12 occurs as a number of  analogues, very few of which are active for humans. In collecting human  stools for analysis Dr. Victor Herbert found that of each 100 micrograms  of vitamin B-12 extracted, only 5 micrograms were analogues active for  humans.[15] Thus even in this most prodigious source of the vitamin, 95%  was composed of analogues which were useless.<\/p>\n<p>Several fermented products such as tempeh, a soya bean product and  spirulinas, used by strict vegans as a source of vitamin B-12, either  do not contain significant amounts of the vitamin or contain analogues  of the vitamin which are not active for humans.[16] Over half of the  adults from a macrobiotic community tested in New England had low  concentrations of vitamin B-12. Children were short in stature and low  in weight. The community relied on sea vegetables for the vitamin.<\/p>\n<p>This reliance on vegetables sources gives a false sense of  security and could actually bring on the symptoms of B-12 deficiency  more quickly.<\/p>\n<p>The amount of vitamin B-12 we need is tiny: about 1 microgram per  day. Eating more than this results in a reserve being built up in the  body. When a person becomes a vegan, those stores are depleted \u2014 but  only gradually. Thus it can be several years before the onset of  symptoms. In England a carefully conducted study carried out on vegans  showed that they all got vitamin B-12 deficiency eventually.[17]<\/p>\n<h3>Brain shrinkage among vegetarians<\/h3>\n<p>But, getting back to brain size, the decline which started with the  advent of agriculture and our greater reliance on foods of plant origin  has now seen a dramatically greater decline in those who have adopted a  &#8216;healthy&#8217;, vegetarian diet.<\/p>\n<p>Scientists at the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics,  University of Oxford, recently discovered that changing to a vegetarian  diet could be bad for our brains \u2014 with those on a meat-free diet six  times more likely to suffer brain shrinkage.[18]<\/p>\n<p>Using tests and brain scans on community-dwelling volunteers aged 61 to  87 years without cognitive impairment at enrolment, they measured the  size of the participants&#8217; brains. When the volunteers were retested five  years later the scientists found those with the lowest levels of  vitamin B12 intake were the most likely to have brain shrinkage. Not  surprisingly, vegans who eschew all foods of animal origin, suffered the  most brain shrinkage. This confirms earlier research showing a link  between brain atrophy and low levels of B12.<\/p>\n<p>Vegans are the most likely to be deficient because the best sources of the vitamin are meat, particularly liver, milk and fish.<\/p>\n<p>There were two other worrying aspects to this trial. The first was  at the start of the trial, the <strong>biggest<\/strong> brain in a vegan, at 1455 ml, was already smaller than smallest brain of someone on  a \u2018normal diet\u2019, at 1456 ml.<\/p>\n<p>The other aspect was even more worrying. It was that all participants  had Vit B-12 which was within the &#8216;normal&#8217; range. This suggests that the  normal range is too low &#8211; and by quite  large margin. I understand  that, based on this study, the Japanese have raised their normal level.<\/p>\n<p>Confirmation of the above study was provided the following year by  another study by the Oxford Project to Investigate Memory and Ageing,  the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of  Oxford, UK.[19] Noting that vitamin B-12 deficiency is often associated  with cognitive deficits, they reviewed evidence that cognition in the  elderly may also be adversely affected at concentrations of vitamin B-12  above the traditional cutoffs for deficiency. Their suggestion is that  the elderly in particular should be encouraged to maintain a good,  rather than just an adequate, vitamin B-12 status by dietary means.<\/p>\n<h3>Conclusion<\/h3>\n<p>It is obvious that we need to be eating more, not less, meat and animal-sourced foods.<\/p>\n<p>If vegetarians \u2014 and vegans in particular \u2014 berate you for &#8216;murdering&#8217;  and eating animals, please be kind to them. They are almost certainly  suffering from self-inflicted brain atrophy, and have little recognition  of both the damage they are doing to themselves and the harm that are  doing to others who follow their advice.<\/p>\n<h3>References<\/h3>\n<p>[1]. Crawford M, Crawford S. <em>The Food We Eat Today<\/em>. Spearman, London, 1972.<br \/>\n[2]. Leopold AC, Ardrey R. Toxic Substances in Plants and Food Habits of Early Man. <strong><em>Science<\/em><\/strong> 1972; 176(34): 512-4.<br \/>\n[3]. McHenry HM. How big were early hominids? <strong><em>Evol Anthropol<\/em><\/strong> 1992; 1: 15-20.<br \/>\n[4]. Stefansson V. <em>The fat of the land.<\/em> MacMillan, New York, 1960. 15-39.<br \/>\n[5]. Sinclair AJ. Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids in mammalian brain. <strong><em>Proc Nutr Soc<\/em><\/strong> 1975; 34: 287-91.<br \/>\n[6]. Crawford MA, Cunnane SC, Harbige LS. <em>A new theory of evolution: quantum theory.<\/em> In: Sinclair A, Gibson R, eds. Essential fatty acids and eicosanoids.  American Oil Chemists Society, Champlaign, Ill, 1992. 87-95.<br \/>\n[7]. Leonard WR, Robertson ML. Evolutionary perspectives on human  nutrition: the influence of brain and body size on diet and metabolism. <strong><em>Am J Human Biol <\/em><\/strong>1994; 6: 77-88.<br \/>\n[8]. Aiello LC, Wheeler P. The expensive tissue hypothesis: the brain and the digestive system in human and primate evolution. <strong><em>Current Anthropology<\/em><\/strong>, 1995; 36: 199-221.<br \/>\n[9]. Milton K. <em>Primate diets and gut morphology: implications for hominid evolution<\/em>.  In: Food and Evolution: Toward a Theory of Food Habits, eds. Harris M,  Ross EB; Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1987, 93-115.<br \/>\n[10]. Martin RD, et al. <em>Gastrointestinal allometry in primates and other mammals<\/em>. In: Size and Scaling in Primate Biology. Jungers WL ed., Plenum Press, New York, 1985, 61-89.<br \/>\n[11]. Ruff CB, Trinkaus E, Holliday TW. Body mass and encephalization in Pleistocene Homo. <strong><em>Nature<\/em><\/strong> 1997; 387: 173-176.<br \/>\n[12]. Eaton, S Boyd, Eaton, Stanley B III. <em>Evolution, diet and health<\/em>.  Presented in association with the scientific session, Origins and  Evolution of Human Diet. 14th International Congress of Anthropological  and Ethnological Sciences, Williamsburg, Virginia, 1998.<br \/>\n[13]. Callender ST, Spray GH. Latent pernicious anaemia. <strong><em>Br J Haematol<\/em><\/strong> 1962; 8: 230.<br \/>\n[14]. Halstead JA, et al. Serum and tissue concentration of vitamin B 12 in certain pathologic states. <strong><em>N Eng J Med<\/em><\/strong> 1959; 260: 575.<br \/>\n[15]. Herbert V. Vitamin B-12: plant sources, requirements and assay. <strong><em>Am J Clin Nutr<\/em><\/strong> 1988; 48: 852.<br \/>\n[16]. Miller DR, et al. Vitamin B-12 status in a macrobiotic community. <strong><em>Am J Clin Nutr<\/em><\/strong> 1991; 53: 524-9.<br \/>\n[17]. Chanarin I, O&#8217;Shea AM, Malkowska V, Rinsler MG. Megaloblastic anaemia in a vegetarian Indian community. <strong><em>Lancet<\/em><\/strong> 1985; ii: 1168.<br \/>\n[18] Vogiatzoglou A, et al. Vitamin B12 status and rate of brain volume loss in community-dwelling elderly. <strong><em>Neurology <\/em><\/strong>2008; 71(11): 826-32<br \/>\n[19] Smith AD, Refsum H. Vitamin B-12 and cognition in the elderly. <strong>Am J Clin Nutr <\/strong>2009; 89: 707S-11S.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Barry Groves Source If you want to get ahead, get a brain There is overwhelming evidence that we can not be a vegetarian species. In 1972 the publication of two independent investigations confirmed this.[1] [2] They concerned fats. About half our brain and nervous system is composed of complicated, long-chain, fatty acids. These are [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1076,700],"class_list":["post-6058","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general","tag-brain","tag-vegetarian"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6058","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6058"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6058\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":9662,"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6058\/revisions\/9662"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6058"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=6058"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.functionalps.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=6058"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}