Skip to content
View Categories

Oral intake of γ-aminobutyric acid affects mood and central nervous system activities during stress

1 min read

γ-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) is a kind of amino acid found in green tea leaves and other foods. Several reports have shown that GABA could affect brain protein synthesis, improve many brain functions such as memory and learning ability, lower blood pressure of spontaneously hypertensive rats, and also have a relaxation effect in humans. However, the evidence for its mood-improving function is still insufficient.

In this study, we investigated how oral ingestion of GABA affects human adults psychologically and physiologically under a psychological stress condition. Sixty-three adults (28 men, 35 women) participated in a randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study over two experimental days.

Capsules containing 100 mg GABA or dextrin as placebo were used as test samples. The results showed that EEG activities including alpha and beta band brain waves decreased as a function of exposure to the mental stress task, and the condition 30 minutes after GABA ingestion decreased this decrease compared to the placebo condition.

That is, GABA may have alleviated mental task-induced stress. This effect also corresponded with the results of the POMS scores.


Amino Acids: Oral Intake of γ-Aminobutyric Acid Affects Mood and Activities of Central Nervous System During Stressed Condition Induced by Mental Tasks

Found at Alkohol adé (german)

Powered by BetterDocs

Close Popup

Even Bye Bye Booze needs a few cookies,.

However, we try only to activate as few as possible technically necessary cookies so that your visit to this site cannot be tracked as far as possible by third parties. We do not share any information about your visit with anyone.

But even we we do need a few - e.g. to display this legal notice or to care for that you do not have to log in again for each page or see this popup again for each page.

As soon as you click on an external link or video, cookies may be set by the operators of these sites, which we cannot influence. Learn more on our privacy page.


Close Popup