Effects of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid supplementation of infant formula on cognition and behaviour at 9years of age

尚未翻譯 尚未翻譯
类别 Primary study
期刊Developmental medicine and child neurology
Year 2012

此文章收錄於 1 Systematic review Systematic reviews (1 reference)

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Aim Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid (LCPUFA) supplementation of infant formula may have a beneficial effect on cognitive development. This study aimed to investigate the effect of LCPUFA formula supplementation primarily on cognition and secondarily on behaviour at age 9years. Special attention was paid to the potentially modifying effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy. Method A double-blind, randomized control study was performed in two groups of healthy infants born at term: one group, constituting the control group, received standard formula (n=169) and another group received standard formula supplemented with LCPUFAs (n=146). A breastfed group (n=159) served as an additional reference. At 9years of age, 72% of the children (control group: n=123; 71 males, 52 females; LCPUFA group: n=91; 42 males, 49 females; breastfed group: n=127, 64 males, 63 females) underwent extensive cognitive and behavioural testing. Results An interaction between infant nutrition and smoking during pregnancy was found. Among children exposed to smoking during pregnancy, LCPUFA supplementation was associated with higher mean verbal IQ scores (p=0.007) and learning and memory (p=0.006). Among children not exposed to smoking during pregnancy, LCPUFA supplementation was associated with lower mean verbal memory scores (p=0.003). Executive function scores were significantly lower in the LCPUFA-supplemented group than in the control group (p=0.001). Breastfeeding was associated with better performance on IQ (p=0.005). Interpretation No consistent beneficial effect of LCPUFA formula supplementation on cognitive development in term-born infants was found. The study confirmed that breastfeeding is associated with better cognition. © The Authors. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology © 2012 Mac Keith Press.
Epistemonikos ID: f03d2dd7b9b952b64ee523d958349db60cee431a
First added on: May 08, 2022