scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of breastfeeding on neuro-development in infancy.

TLDR
A clear advantage of breastfeeding on infant development was demonstrated, but the lack of a dose–response association on pass rates suggests that the breastfeeding effect may be confounded by other unobserved factors or that there is a critical threshold during which time the effect of breast milk may be particularly salient for bolstering brain development.
Abstract
The present study examines whether breastfeeding is associated with neuro-developmental advantages at 9 months of age on a standardised measure of infant development in a large cohort study of Irish children. It is hypothesised that if breast-milk confers an independent benefit, infants who were never breastfed will have reached fewer developmental milestones than those who were partially or exclusively breastfed, after controlling for putative confounding variables. Families with infants aged 9-months were recruited as part of a nationally representative sample for the birth cohort of the Growing Up in Ireland study (n = 11,134). Information was collected from mothers on breastfeeding practices, socio-demographic characteristics and developmental progress during a household interview. Parent-report items on development covered communication, gross motor, fine motor, problem solving and personal-social skills. Analysis of pass/fail status in each developmental domain using binary logistic regression showed a positive effect of any breastfeeding on gross motor, fine motor, problem solving and personal-social skills (but not communication) and these remained after adjustment for a range of confounding variables. There was, however, little evidence of a dose–response effect or advantage of exclusive over partial breastfeeding. A clear advantage of breastfeeding on infant development was demonstrated. However, the lack of a dose–response association on pass rates suggests that the breastfeeding effect may be confounded by other unobserved factors or that there is a critical threshold during which time the effect of breast milk may be particularly salient for bolstering brain development.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Breastfeeding and early white matter development: A cross-sectional study

TL;DR: The findings of this study provide new insight into the earliest developmental advantages associated with breastfeeding, and support the hypothesis that breast milk constituents promote healthy neural growth and white matter development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breastfeeding duration and cognitive, language and motor development at 18 months of age: Rhea mother–child cohort in Crete, Greece

TL;DR: Longer duration of breast feeding was associated with increased scores in cognitive, language and motor development at 18 months of age, independently from a wide range of parental and infant characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurodevelopment of HIV-Exposed and HIV-Unexposed Uninfected Children at 24 Months

TL;DR: HEU children performed equally well on neurodevelopmental assessments at 24 months of age compared with HUU children, and results suggesting no adverse impact of in-utero HIV and antiretroviral exposure on early neurodevelopment are reassuring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficacy of e‐technologies in improving breastfeeding outcomes among perinatal women: a meta‐analysis

TL;DR: Support for the development of web-based, texting messaging, compact disc read-only memory, electronic prompts and interactive computer agent interventions for promoting and supporting breastfeeding is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breastfeeding and Childhood IQ: The Mediating Role of Gray Matter Volume

TL;DR: The study findings suggest that the effects of breastfeeding on child IQ are mediated through subcortical gray volume, which is of public health significance and further supports the importance of breastfeeding in mental health promotion.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Validity and Reliability of Maternal Recall of Breastfeeding Practice

TL;DR: The existing studies suggest that maternal recall is a valid and reliable estimate of breastfeeding initiation and duration, especially when the duration of breastfeeding is recalled after a short period, and reliability for the age at introduction of food and fluids other than breast milk is less satisfactory.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
How infant feeding practice affect gross motor development?

The paper states that breastfeeding is associated with a positive effect on gross motor development in infants.