美国儿童膳食脂肪酸与认知能力关系的性别差异。

Frontiers in evolutionary neuroscience Pub Date : 2011-11-02 eCollection Date: 2011-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnevo.2011.00005
William D Lassek, Steven J C Gaulin
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引用次数: 52

摘要

因为第一批神经元是在n-3 (omega-3)脂肪酸二十二碳六烯酸(DHA)含量高的环境中进化的,这种脂肪酸成为神经结构和功能的主要组成部分,占人脑干重的10%。由于n-3脂肪酸必须来自饮食,这表明饮食中的n-3脂肪酸在认知中可能起积极作用,而n-6脂肪酸可能起消极作用,它们与n-3竞争获取关键酶。由于人类女性必须从母亲童年时期储存的脂肪中提供DHA,以供其后代发育异常大的大脑,因此她们对DHA的需求特别大。我们使用逐步回归来确定特定的膳食脂肪酸和其他营养素是否与来自第三次全国健康和营养检查调查的4000多名6-16岁的美国儿童的认知表现有关;各种可能的生物、社会和环境风险因素在统计上得到控制。在这种情况下,唯一与认知能力相关的饮食因素是n-3和n-6脂肪酸。膳食中n-3脂肪酸与男女儿童认知测试成绩呈正相关,n-6脂肪酸与男女儿童认知测试成绩呈显著负相关。在女性儿童中,摄入n-3的积极影响是男性的两倍,超过了接触铅的负面影响。这表明,增加饮食中n-3脂肪酸的摄入,减少n-6脂肪酸的摄入,可能对儿童,尤其是女性的认知能力有好处。
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Sex differences in the relationship of dietary Fatty acids to cognitive measures in american children.

Because the first neurons evolved in an environment high in the n-3 (omega-3) fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), this fatty acid became a major component of neural structure and function and makes up 10% of the dry weight of the human brain. Since n-3 fatty acids must come from the diet, this suggests a possible positive role for dietary n-3 fatty acids in cognition and a possible negative role for n-6 fatty acids, which compete with n-3 for access to critical enzymes. Because human females must provide DHA for the growth of the unusually large brains of their offspring from maternal fat stored during childhood, their need for DHA is especially great. We used stepwise regression to determine whether particular dietary fatty acids and other nutrients were related to cognitive performance in over 4000 American children aged 6-16 from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; a variety of possible biological, social, and environmental risk factors were statistically controlled. In this context the only dietary factors related to cognitive performance were n-3 and n-6 fatty acids. Dietary n-3 fatty acids were positively related to cognitive test scores in male and female children, while n-6 showed the reverse relationship, significantly so in females. In female children the positive effects of n-3 intake were twice as strong as in males and exceeded the negative effects of lead exposure. This suggests that increasing dietary intake of n-3 and decreasing n-6 fatty acids may have cognitive benefits in children, especially in females.

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