Publication | Closed Access
Breast-Feeding and Optimal Visual Development
215
Citations
25
References
1993
Year
NutritionBreastfeedingHuman LactationEarly VisionVisual StatusBody CompositionLactationOptimal Visual DevelopmentPublic HealthBehavioral SciencesStereo AcuityOphthalmologyVisual DevelopmentChild DevelopmentInfant NutritionEye TrackingPediatricsChild NutritionNutritional ScienceHuman NutritionMedicine
ABSTRACT The goal of the present study was to determine whether dietary supply of ω-3 essential fatty acid (EFA) influences visual development in healthy pre-term and full-term infants. Visual status was examined in human milk-fed infants (ample dietary ω-3 EFA supply) and corn oil-based formula-fed infants (no dietary ω-3 EFA; standard formula prior to 1987). At 57 weeks postconception (4 months adjusted age), both pre-term and full-term human milk-fed infants had significantly better visual evoked potential (VEP) and forced-choice preferentiallooking (FPL) acuity than formula-fed infants. Acuity was correlated with a dietary ω-3 sufficiency index from red blood cell membranes obtained at 57 weeks postconception. At 36 months, full-term human milk-fed children had significantly better random dot stereo acuity and letter matching ability than formula-fed children. Stereo acuity and performance on the letter matching test were correlated with a dietary ω-3 sufficiency index from red blood cell membranes obtained at 4 months. These results suggest that dietary ω-3 fatty acids play an important role in visual development.
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