Chronic protein deficiency hard on kids' brains

Fri Aug 8, 2008 12:50pm EDT
 
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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Chronic protein deficiency may cause delays in a child's brain development that improve little over time, a new study shows.

The research was conducted in India, a country with a high rate of child malnutrition despite its current economic boom.

The World Health Organization estimates that for the years 1990 to 1997, more than half of Indian children younger than 5 were undernourished, according to Dr. Bhoomika R. Kar, from the University of Allahabad in India, and colleagues.

For their study, published in the online journal Behavioral and Brain Functions, the researchers assessed the cognitive development of 20 malnourished children and 20 adequately nourished children at different ages.

Malnourished children, the researchers found, performed more poorly than adequately nourished children on most of the neuropsychological tests they were given.

In particular, malnourished children had problems with tests of attention, memory, visual perception, verbal comprehension and other so-called "higher cognitive processes."

Moreover, there was only minimal improvement with age. The cognitive performance of malnourished 5- to 7-year-olds was "poor and much lower" than that of adequately nourished children their age, and the gap was not much smaller among 8- to 10-year-olds.

A chronic lack of protein does not seem to affect basic cognitive processes like movement speed, which is affected in cases of other nutritional deficiencies, the investigators note.

The current findings, they say, support numerous other studies that have shown a "wide range of cognitive deficits" in malnourished children in India.

SOURCE: Behavioral and Brain Functions, online July 24, 2008.

 
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