City
Epaper

Exercise can counteract depression symptoms induced by junk food diet: Study

By IANS | Updated: October 21, 2025 16:55 IST

New Delhi, Oct 21 People eating more junk food can counteract its ill effects on mental health by ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 21 People eating more junk food can counteract its ill effects on mental health by cardio exercises such as running, according to an animal study on Tuesday.

Researchers at University College Cork in Ireland identified specific metabolic pathways through which exercise counteracts the negative behavioural effects of consuming a Western-style diet.

The research demonstrated that voluntary running exercise can mitigate depression-like behaviours induced by high-fat, high-sugar diets associated with both circulating hormones and gut-derived metabolites.

“The findings provide crucial insights into how lifestyle interventions might be optimised to support mental health in an era of widespread ultra-processed food consumption,” said Professor Yvonne Nolan from the varsity.

In the study, published in the peer-reviewed journal Brain Medicine, the team exposed adult male rats to either standard chow or a rotating cafeteria diet consisting of various high-fat and high-sugar foods for seven and a half weeks, with half of each dietary group having access to running wheels.

The study revealed that voluntary wheel running exerted an antidepressant-like behavioural effect in poor diet quality, suggesting that physical activity may benefit individuals consuming Western-style diets.

Professor Nolan and team found that the diet dramatically altered the gut metabolome, affecting 100 out of 175 measured metabolites in sedentary animals.

“Exercise showed more selective effects, modulating only a subset of these changes. Three metabolites previously linked to mood regulation stood out for their response pattern: anserine, indole-3-carboxylate, and deoxyinosine were all decreased by the cafeteria diet but partially restored by exercise,” Nolan said.

Further, the research utilised comprehensive behavioural testing batteries to assess multiple domains of brain function.

While the junk food alone did not significantly impair spatial learning or recognition memory in these adult rats, exercise produced modest improvements in spatial navigation.

The team also examined anxiety-like behaviours, finding subtle anxiolytic effects of exercise independent of dietary composition.

The findings suggest that while exercise can provide mood benefits regardless of diet quality, achieving full neuroplastic benefits may require attention to nutritional status. This has implications for designing interventions that maximise both feasibility and biological impact, the researchers said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIranian negotiators fine-tune agenda in Islamabad ahead of high-stakes peace talks with US

NationalManipur pays homage to Maharaj Narasingh on 176th death anniversary

FootballNeymar heading in right direction towards full fitness: Brazil coach Ancelotti

NationalCM Bhajanlal Sharma highlights welfare push at Rajasthan Event

NationalBhopal Passport Office holds training programme for postal staff to strengthen passport services at POPSKs

Health Realted Stories

HealthGovt mulls cough syrups ban for kids under 2 amid safety concerns: Report

Health‘India Pharma 2026’ to drive India’s transition to global innovation hub

HealthCARI Bengaluru 1st CCRAS institute to get landmark ISO accreditation in biochemistry, haematology

HealthThis common nutrient could supercharge cancer treatment: Study

HealthNo Sugar For 15 Days? Here's How Your Body Will Transform