Eating
dark chocolate may positively affect mood and relieve depressive symptoms,
finds a new UCL-led study looking at whether different types of chocolate are
associated with mood disorders.
The
study, published in Depression and Anxiety, is the first to examine
the association with depression according to the type of chocolate consumed.
Researchers
from UCL worked in collaboration with scientists from the University of Calgary
and Alberta Health Services Canada and assessed data from 13,626 adults
from the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
Participants’ chocolate consumption was assessed against their scores on the Patient Health Questionnaire, which assesses depressive symptoms.
Participants’ chocolate consumption was assessed against their scores on the Patient Health Questionnaire, which assesses depressive symptoms.
In
the cross-sectional study, a range of other factors including height,
weight, marital status, ethnicity, education, household income, physical
activity, smoking and chronic health problems were also taken into account to
ensure the study only measured chocolate’s effect on depressive symptoms.
After
adjusting for these factors, it was found that individuals who reported eating
any dark chocolate in two 24-hour periods had 70 per cent lower odds of
reporting clinically relevant depressive symptoms than those who reported not
eating chocolate at all.
The 25 per cent of chocolate consumers who ate the most chocolate (of any kind, not just dark) were also less likely to report depressive symptoms than those who didn’t eat chocolate at all. However researchers found no significant link between any non‐dark chocolate consumption and clinically relevant depressive symptoms.
The 25 per cent of chocolate consumers who ate the most chocolate (of any kind, not just dark) were also less likely to report depressive symptoms than those who didn’t eat chocolate at all. However researchers found no significant link between any non‐dark chocolate consumption and clinically relevant depressive symptoms.
Depression
affects more than 300 million people worldwide, according to the World Health
Organisation, and is the leading global cause of disability.
Lead
author Dr Sarah Jackson (UCL Institute of Epidemiology & Health Care) said:
“This study provides some evidence that consumption of chocolate,
particularly dark chocolate, may be associated with reduced odds of clinically
relevant depressive symptoms.
“However
further research is required to clarify the direction of causation – it could
be the case that depression causes people to lose their interest in eating
chocolate, or there could be other factors that make people both less likely to
eat dark chocolate and to be depressed.
“Should
a causal relationship demonstrating a protective effect of chocolate
consumption on depressive symptoms be established, the biological mechanism
needs to be understood to determine the type and amount of chocolate
consumption for optimal depression prevention and management.”
Chocolate is widely reported to have mood‐enhancing properties and several mechanisms for a relationship between chocolate and mood have been proposed.
Principally,
chocolate contains a number of psychoactive ingredients which produce a feeling
of euphoria similar to that of cannabinoid, found in cannabis. It also contains
phenylethylamine, a neuromodulator which is believed to be important for
regulating people’s moods.
Experimental
evidence also suggests that mood improvements only take place if the chocolate
is palatable and pleasant to eat, which suggests that the experience of
enjoying chocolate is an important factor, not just the ingredients present.
While
the above is true of all types of chocolate, dark chocolate has a higher
concentration of flavonoids, antioxidant chemicals which have been shown to
improve inflammatory profiles, which have been shown to play a role in the
onset of depression.