So technically, I am on a blogging/twitter break, to allow
me to focus on fieldwork and papers. However, yesterday was such an awesome day
for human lactation research, I really had to check back in. Yesterday, MelissaBartick released an awesome piece showing the maternal health consequences and
costs of not breastfeeding,
following on earlier work looking at the economic side. And, Sean Deoni and colleagues
reported differences in the white matter myelin content of specific brain areas
between exclusively breastfed, formula fed, and infants receiving both during the
first months of life. The paper was reported in Science News and I immediately
pulled the actual paper. It started a journey of discovery, and the story is
far more detailed – and interesting – than the Science News article reported.
There are actually several papers of interest here, each building on the work
of the other in addressing the common theme: are the brains of breastfed and
formula fed infants different and if so, how permanent are these differences?
Figure 1: A reference map of the brain. Source: http://www.willamette.edu/~gorr/classes/cs449/brain.html |
Prior research has demonstrated that breastfeeding infants
have increased IQ and cognitive performance compared to formula fed infants;
these differences are seen even in low resource populations, where maternal
education and household income tend to be inversely associated with
breastfeeding duration. It was speculated that certain fatty acids in human
milk, specifically the very long chain essential fatty acids Docosahexaenoic
acid (DHA) and Arachidonic acid (AA), may contribute to these differences. DHA
and AA are preferentially used in neural myelin sheaths. They have excellent
neural conductivity. Studies have found that DHA makes up about 20% of the
fatty acids in the brain, although this varies by region (Xiao et al., 2005),
and probably population as well, although we do not know for certain. However,
we do not know if it is the DHA, if it is the cholesterol in milk, as Deoni
(2013) also proposed, or hormones in milk (known or unknown) that may be
contributing to these differences. So for the moment, we will leave DHA aside,
and focus on the brain differences between breastfed and formula fed infants.
There are a handful of useful papers here: today I will focus on three. These
are Deoni et al. 2013 (Deoni, S.C.L., et al., Breastfeeding and early white
matter development: A cross-sectional study, NeuroImage (2013),http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.05.090),
Kafouri et al., 2013 (International Journal of Epidemiology 2013;42:150–159; doi:10.1093/ije/dys172)
and Khedr et al., 2004 (Acta Paediatrica 93:734-738). Infant brains, by the way are amazing! Our
fastest rates of brain growth are during gestation and the first two years of
life. During this time, the brain consumes a huge amount of energy – and will
reach about 80% of adult size by age two. Below is a map of the brain. I found it quite useful to keep track of what was going on where.
The most recent study, by Deoni et al.,
(2013) looks at white matter structure in the brains of 3 groups of 133 kids.
Groups are defined by feeding status at 3 months of age: exclusively breastfed,
formula fed, both. At the time of measurement, each group had a mean age of
around 775 days – or just over 2 years of age. There were 85 kids in the EBF
group, 38 in the combo group, and 51 in the exclusive formula feeding group.
The children were scanned for 19-24 minutes using multicomponent relaxation
magnetic resonance imaging (mcDESPOT, Figure 1) during natural sleep (no
drugging!). McDESPOT allows for the estimation of the white matter content of
neural tissue by measuring the amount of myelin associated water fraction.
Figure 2:
: Graphic illustrating the principles behind mcDESPOT. Image
is by Sean Deoni, the study author.
|
The major findings were that the breastfed
infants had greater white matter growth in late maturing areas of the brain.
This suggests that the absence of something in formula that is present in human
milk may have delayed the brain growth in the mixed feed and formula feed kids.
Key areas with increased VFm were the frontal brain, left temporal lobe, corpus
callous, internal capsule, corticospinal tract, cerebellum, and left optic
radiation. By comparison, infants receiving formula had increased white matter
in the occipital lobe, right optic radiation, and right internal capsule.
Figure 3: How mcDESPOT looks in my mind. Source: http://www.wtfnews.org/general/kid-freaked-out-by-ronald-mcdonald/ |
Confused yet? Me too. I read this with a map
of the brain and a lot of patience. Essentially, what Deoni et al., found was
that the areas of the brain that are considering late maturing – and associated
with higher order functions (such as performance on IQ tests, social and
emotional functioning) had greater amount of white matter in infants
exclusively breastfed to three months, and that these differences could be
detected at age 2, along with high receptive language scores. There was also an
association between breastfeeding duration and white matter content of specific
brain regions. The right inferiorfrontal and corticospinal tract had a 30%
increase in white matter compared to those same areas in formula fed infants,
and longer breastfeeding durations (600 vs 200 days) were associated with greater
white matter content of the Brodmann’s area.
The authors speculated that the greater
amounts of white matter in the brains of breastfed infants might persist into
later life.
This follows on Kafouri et al., (2013), who were also investigating
the association between breastfeeding and brain development. However, Kafouri
et al., are slightly later in time – specifically, they are looking at brain
scans from 571 adolescents (12-18) and testing for differences in the cortical thickness of specific areas
of the brain associated with cognitive function and performance on the Wescher
Intelligence Scale Test. Key areas were identified from 23 prior studies and 30
analyses and were limited to 328 foci in 36 “IQ related regions” of the brain.
All analyses were adjusted for potential confounders: education and income, and
prenatal exposures such as maternal or second hand smoking, alcohol use,
parity, birth weight, and infant sex.
Figure 4: The process behind mapping cortisol thickness. Source: http://www.martinos.org/neurorecovery/technology.htm |
Among adolescents, exclusive breastfeeding
duration (EBF) had a positive association with cortical thickness in the
superior and inferior parietal lobes. There were no differences by EBF duration
in the front eye field, medial or ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, or occipital
cortex. EBF duration was also associated with increased performance on the full
IQ test. However, there was no association between cortical thickness in the
superior and inferior parietal lobes and performance on the Wescher IQ test. Overall,
the main finding was the increased cortical thickness in the parietal lobes
with limited evidence for a dose dependent association between breastfeeding
duration and cortical thickness.
Our blast from the past is Khedr et al.,
2004, specifically looking at neurological maturation between breastfeed and
formula fed infants at age 1. In a sample of 53 infants, 30 breastfed and 23
formula fed, they reported shorter latencies in the breastfed infants compared
to the formula fed infants on two parameters: visual and auditory, but not
somatosensory. Essentially, the infants who were breastfed had more mature
visual and auditory responses. This makes sense, as the somatosensory system is
established prior to birth and postnatal feeding may have minimal influences.
So what does it all mean? Well, it likely
means that the absence of something in formula has long term influences on the
neurological development of children, and that some of these differences
persist at least into adulthood. And for a first few sentences into what this
research will become, it is pretty cool stuff. For many years, researchers have
argued about what in milk is associated with the decrease in risk of obesity
and related metabolic conditions in breastfed infants. Now, we get to argue
about what in milk is associated with the increased amount of white matter and
cognitive thickness. And maybe it is DHA, but what we know about DHA is also
pretty limited. Before we go jumping on the DHA bandwagon, the DHA content of
American women’s milk is actually quite low (Figure 5) compared to the rest of
the world.
Figure 5: DHA in the milks of the world.
The DHA content of US women is actually quite low. Take a
supplement. We are also sad that our data for the Philippines is not on here.
Source: http://www.dhababy.com/Infants/BreastisBest.aspx
|
We could all probably use more DHA in our diets, and maybe we should
even recommend that reproductive aged women take a DHA supplement (fish oil)
like we recommend folic acid. If it is DHA, that is an easy enough fix – the addition
of DHA to infant formula a few years ago provides an opportunity to test the
hypothesis that it is DHA by doing a similar set of analyses on breastfed, DHA
fortified, and non-DHA fortified formula users. If two groups do not look like
the others, you have some interesting results. DHA formula and breastfeeding
grouping together? Hooray! It is DHA. The two formula groups lumping together –
it is something else, or many, many something elses in the milk – or even the
act of feeding. And of course, getting the milk would be awesome as well,
because then you could look at the brain and the fatty acids and hormones in
the milk (Maybe milk sugars are important? Maybe hormones?). And doing a
longitudinal study, starting close to birth and following infants through a
year or two. Oh yeah, and there are some gene polymorphisms (FADS) that appear
to be involved in fatty acid content of milk and infant cognition as well
(Steer et al., 2010).
In summary: there is some new evidence
suggesting that breastfeeding is associated with improved growth in white matter
in early life, and increased cortical thickness that persists at least until
adolescents. However, how these factors change longitudinally is unknown, and
what it is in milk that may be associated with normal brain maturation (because
breastfeeding is the default feeding condition; infants evolved drinking human
milk) is also unknown. But there is a lot of material here, and it will be very
interesting to see where it goes next.
References
Brion MJ, Lawlor DA, Matijasevich A, Horta B, Anselmi L,
Araújo CL, Menezes AM, Victora CG, Smith GD. 2011. What are the causal effects
of breastfeeding on IQ, obesity and blood pressure? Evidence from comparing
high-income with middle-income cohorts. Int J Epidemiol. 2011 Jun;40(3):670-80.
doi: 10.1093/ije/dyr020.
Deoni SC, Dean DC 3rd, Piryatinksy I, O'Muircheartaigh J,
Waskiewicz N, Lehman K, Han M, Dirks H. 2013 Breastfeeding and Early White
Matter Development: A Cross Sectional Study. Neuroimage. May 27. doi:pii:
S1053-8119(13)00592-2. 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.05.090. [Epub ahead of print]
Kafouri S, Kramer M, Leonard G, Perron M, Pike B, Richer L,
Toro R, Veillette S, Pausova Z, Paus T. 2013. Breastfeeding and brain structure
in adolescence. Int J Epidemiol. 42(1):150-9. doi: 10.1093/ije/dys172. Epub
2012 Nov 21.
Khedr EM, Farghaly WM, Amry S, El-Din, Osman, AA. 2004. Neural
maturation of breastfed and formula-fed infants. Acta Paediatrica. 93(6): 734-738.
Steer CD, Davey Smith G, Emmett PM, Hibbeln JR, Golding J.
2010. FADS2 polymorphisms modify the effect of breastfeeding on child IQ. PLoS
One. 2010 Jul 13;5(7):e11570. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011570.
Xiao Y, Huang Y, Chen ZY. 2005. Distribution, depletion and
recovery of docosahexaenoic acid are region-specific in rat brain. Br J Nutr 94(4):544-50.
This is very good information.i think it's useful advice. really nice blog. keep it up!!!
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