From foodconsumer.org
Diet for Brain Development, From the Beginning
By Rosalie Marion Bliss
Dec 31, 2007 - 10:16:42 AM
November 21, 2007 -
Studies looking into how diet and nutrition affect central nervous system
development from birth are being conducted by Agricultural Research Service (ARS)-funded scientists. They are using
noninvasive tools to assess infant, toddler and school-aged children's
psychological, neurological and physiological development, as well as other
brain-related functions.
Healthy newborns soak up information from their surroundings while their
developing brains sprout billions of nerve cell connections, or synapses. The
brain's "hardwiring" actually starts in the womb, directed by the growing fetus'
genetic game plan acquired from both parents. Good nutrition is key to
supporting the growth of this network of neurons from the beginning.
ARS, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
chief scientific research agency, is funding research at the Arkansas Children's
Nutrition Center (ACNC),
which is managed cooperatively by ARS and the Arkansas Children's Hospital in Little
Rock, Ark.
Among other projects, Terry Pivik, a psychophysiologist who heads the ACNC's
Brain Function Laboratory, and Janet Gilchrist, who heads
the ACNC's Clinical Nutrition Unit, are interested in defining best feeding
practices for brain development among infants and children.
For a project called
The Beginnings Study, researchers are using
measures of brain activity, behavior and growth to study hundreds of infants who
have been reared exclusively on one of the three most commonly fed infant diets:
breast milk, cow's milk formula or soy-based formula.
So far, preliminary results indicate that there are slight cognitive and
language advantages among the breast-fed infants at 6 and 12 months, compared
with infants in the two formula-fed groups. The researchers caution that these
differences will require further evaluation in the context of other contributory
factors. The study will continue for several more years.
Brain development continues throughout early childhood and is now believed to
undergo a second wave of dramatic functional changes during adolescence,
according to experts.
Read more about this
research in the November/December 2007 issue of
Agricultural Research
magazine.