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Anxiety Attacks Caused by Food

Is Food Making You Anxious?

by Dr. Craig A. Maxwell

When you hear that anxiety attacks could be caused by food it may seem like old news. After all, anyone who lives with anxiety attacks is aware caffeine can trigger them. When it comes to treating anxiety effectively, avoiding trigger foods is only half the battle. It isn’t only what you eat, but how your body processes what it’s given that can determine the severity of your anxiety.

The Connection between Anxiety Attacks and Food

Poor diet and poor digestive health have caused an epidemic of nutritional deficiencies. Either you’re not eating a nutritious diet or your body is not successfully absorbing nutrients from your food. Perhaps it’s a little bit of both.

According to published psychiatric studies, lack of adequate levels of vitamin D3 in an expectant mother greatly increased the chances of her child being born with a diagnosable mental illness: schizophrenia, anxiety, and depression being the three most common.

Magnesium deficiency is another frequently-overlooked cause of anxiety. Without adequate levels of magnesium, your neurological health can be severely impacted. Those with magnesium deficiency often experience debilitating anxiety attacks, insomnia, unusual behavior, and paranoia.

Until recently, the proposed connection between food and anxiety was cursory at best. Now, more and more studies are emerging to show that food allergies and intolerance can contribute to panic attacks.

Gluten is a protein found in wheat, barley, rye, and some oats. Inability to digest this protein not only has a negative impact on your digestive health but your mental health as well. Gluten can contribute to anxiety in several ways.

For one, if you have autoimmune celiac disease, your immune system will cause chronic inflammation in your gut as it attempts to destroy what it believes to be a foreign invader. This chronic inflammation interferes with the proper function of your enteric nervous system or “gut brain.” This lowers your natural stores of the feel-good hormone, serotonin, which can cause anxiety.

Also, gluten acts as an addictive opiate to the brain and causes cravings for the indigestible protein. This feeling of addiction and withdrawal, even over the course of several hours, can trigger a panic attack.

Furthermore, when your digestion is negatively impacted in this way, it can wreak havoc with your blood sugar, causing dangerous drops and spikes. This constant state of chemical confusion can also bring on anxiety attacks.

Intolerance to synthetic food dyes found in cereal, candy, gum, and soda can be a hidden panic attack trigger. Research has shown that children and teenagers who consume a diet high in synthetic food dyes such as Red #40, Yellow #5, and Blue Lake have difficulty with concentration, exhibit symptoms of ADHD, have uncontrollable mood swings, aggressiveness, hostility, phobias and anxiety.

Unlike gluten intolerance, corn intolerance hasn’t quite yet reached the same ‘popularity’ and understanding, but it still exists. My strong belief is that the inability to digest corn is due to the fact that the large majority of it is genetically modified. Corn intolerance symptoms are very similar to that of gluten intolerance and can often contribute to unusual psychiatric symptoms.

Soy is another crop that is mostly genetically modified, which can contribute to unusual mental health symptoms. Genetically modified soy contains a pesticide called Bacillus thuringiensis injected directly into the seed. It cannot be washed off. Continued consumption of a food product containing pesticides can cause permanent neurological damage that can cause the symptoms of mental disease.

Hypoglycemia isn’t a case of anxiety attacks being caused by food but by the way your body processes the nutrients you’re taking in. In a person with hypoglycemia, there is a deficiency in blood glucose (sugar), which is your body’s main source of energy. If you’re hypoglycemic and go for more than a few hours without eating, you may feel shaky, disoriented, anxious, and moody until your sugar becomes stable again.

In addition to gluten, food dyes, corn, and soy, which are trigger foods for those intolerant to them, there are other foods that may bring on panic attacks. Caffeine is a big one as it is a stimulant. Those with anxiety should avoid excessive caffeine consumption. Sugar (aspartame, table sugar, sucralose, high fructose corn syrup) interferes with proper glucose function and can bring on feelings of panic and anxiety. Alcohol, starchy foods, and anything containing MSG can also worsen your panic attacks.

Anxiety Attacks Can Be Worsened by Prescription Drugs

The most common conventional treatment for anxiety is prescription medication like Xanax and Klonopin. While these drugs may lessen anxious feelings for a short time, they do not treat the underlying causes of panic attacks themselves.

Furthermore, long-term use of prescription drugs for anxiety can worsen panic attacks by causing both physical and psychological addiction and dependence. Quite commonly any attempt to get off of these medications can trigger anxiety attacks much worse than what was experienced before the drugs were introduced.

The Importance of Keeping a Food Journal

The best way to tell if food or the way your body processes food is causing your anxiety attacks is to keep a food journal. Record every single food and drink you consume and how you feel 1-2 hours afterward for several months. Over time, you may notice a pattern and be able to eliminate most if not all of your trigger foods. Keeping a food journal can also help you to pinpoint allergies and correct nutritional deficiencies.

Before you ask your doctor for a prescription for your anxiety, find out if your panic attacks are caused by food. A few dietary changes and the addition of high-grade nutritional supplements may be all you need to get your anxiety under control.

Resources:
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/12/38
http://toxsci.oxfordjournals.org/content/90/1/178.short
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11126-011-9186-y#page-1

http://www.medical-hypotheses.com/article/S0306-9877(06)00103-4/abstract