mental health australia

Changing the Mind by Nourishing the Brain

Why Diet, Neurobiology, and Relationship All Matter in Mental Health

In recent years, mental health has increasingly been explored through the lens of neuroscience. One area of growing interest is how the brain’s biological needs may interact with emotional and psychological experience. As an organ with high energy demands, the brain relies on adequate and stable metabolic support to function optimally.

In her book Change Your Diet, Change Your Mind, psychiatrist Georgia Ede brings together research from psychiatry, neuroscience, and metabolic medicine to explore how mental health experiences may not be fully explained by the concept of “chemical imbalance” alone. Current research increasingly examines how factors such as energy metabolism, inflammation, blood glucose regulation, and micronutrient status may be relevant to understanding mental health presentations including depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, ADHD, eating disorders, and psychosis.  

Key Perspectives From Nutritional Psychiatry Research

Research in nutritional psychiatry draws on decades of findings across multiple disciplines. Some commonly discussed perspectives include the following.

The Brain as an Energy-Demanding Organ

The brain accounts for approximately 20–25% of the body’s total energy use. When glucose regulation is unstable or metabolic stress is present, this may be associated with experiences such as:

  • Anxiety or agitation
  • Low mood or emotional variability
  • Difficulties with concentration, attention, or mental clarity

These experiences are not diagnostic in themselves, but may provide a useful biological context when exploring emotional and psychological symptoms.

Blood Glucose Regulation and Stress Responses

Fluctuations in blood glucose have been associated in research with activation of the body’s stress response system, including increased cortisol and adrenaline. Some individuals describe experiences such as:

  • Heightened alertness or hypervigilance
  • Panic-like sensations
  • Irritability or emotional reactivity
  • Disturbed sleep

From a neurobiological perspective, this may be understood as contributing to a heightened or prolonged stress response within the nervous system.

Inflammation and Emotional Experience

Dietary patterns high in ultra-processed foods have been associated in research with markers of systemic and neuro-inflammation. Inflammatory processes have been explored in relation to experiences such as:

  • Low mood or reduced motivation
  • Diminished pleasure or interest
  • Cognitive slowing
  • Increased sensitivity to perceived threat

These associations highlight how biological factors may influence emotional tone and perception, even when external circumstances remain unchanged.

Nutrient Status and Nervous System Function

Nutrients such as B-vitamins, zinc, magnesium, iron, omega-3 fats, and amino acids play recognised roles in neurotransmitter synthesis and nervous system functioning. Variations or deficiencies have been associated with experiences such as:

  • Emotional blunting or emotional variability
  • Heightened anxiety
  • Reduced stress tolerance
  • Challenges in emotional or relational regulation

These observations do not replace psychological formulation but may add an additional layer of understanding.

Relational Psychotherapy Informed by Neurobiology

Relational psychotherapy emphasises the role of relationship, attunement, and emotional safety in psychological healing. Neurobiological research has contributed to understanding why relational experiences can support regulation, integration, and emotional development.

When the brain is under significant physiological or metabolic stress, however, relational and reflective capacities may be more difficult to access. A relational psychotherapy approach informed by neurobiological understanding recognises that:

  • Metabolic or inflammatory stress may affect cognitive and emotional regulation
  • Reflection and mentalisation are supported by a settled nervous system
  • Attachment experiences involve psychological, somatic, and neurobiological processes

This perspective supports a bottom-up approach, attending first to nervous system stability before expecting higher-order cognitive or emotional integration.


Integrating Nutritional Understanding Within Psychotherapy

Psychotherapists do not prescribe diets. However, an informed understanding of biological and metabolic factors can provide useful context within psychotherapy. At mariecarmodypsychology, collaboration may occur with medical practitioners (GPs) who are interested in integrative perspectives when working with psychological concerns such as body image and self-esteem.

Within appropriate professional boundaries, this may include:

  • Providing psychoeducation about the potential relationship between nutrition, mood, and anxiety
  • Supporting clients to observe patterns between eating habits and emotional experience
  • Reducing shame by framing symptoms within a broader physiological and relational context
  • Collaborating with GPs, psychiatrists, or dietitians when appropriate

Some clients describe experiences such as improved emotional steadiness, greater reflective capacity, or increased tolerance for relational closeness when their nervous system feels more supported. This may create conditions that allow psychotherapeutic work to proceed with greater depth and safety.

Therapy as a Regulating Relationship Not a Standalone Solution

Research in nutritional psychiatry challenges the idea that mental health experiences exist solely “in the mind.” At the same time, food alone does not address attachment injury, developmental trauma, or relational loss.

Mental health is often explored at the intersection of:

  • Biology (nutrition, sleep, nervous system regulation)
  • Psychology (meaning-making, emotional awareness)
  • Relationship (attunement, safety, and repair)

A relational psychotherapy approach informed by neurobiology attends to all three, as clinically appropriate.

Toward a More Compassionate Framework for Mental Health

For many people, learning that emotional distress may be influenced by biological and metabolic factors can be relieving. It can shift the narrative from self-blame toward curiosity about what the nervous system may need to feel more supported.

By integrating general nutritional and neurobiological understanding with relational psychotherapy, this approach offers a broader, more embodied framework for understanding mental health one that attends to both brain function and relational experience.