4.7 Article

Associations between the Mediterranean Diet Pattern and Weight Status and Cognitive Development in Preschool Children

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13113723

Keywords

early childhood; nutrition; Mediterranean diet; body mass index; cognitive development

Funding

  1. EU-FP7-HEALTH DORIAN Project: Development Origins of Healthy and Unhealthy Aging: The Role of Maternal Obesity [278603]
  2. JPI-HDHL-INTIMIC Knowledge Platform of Food, Diet, Intestinal Microbiomics, and Human Health [KP-778, 23092/7303/19]
  3. JPI-HDHL-INTIMIC Joint Transnational Research program [INTIMIC-085, 946/2019]
  4. Joint Action European Joint Programming Initiative: A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life (JPI HDHL) - Fund for Scientific Research (FRS-FNRS, Belgium)
  5. Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO, Belgium)
  6. INSERM Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (France)
  7. Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture (BMEL)
  8. Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR)
  9. Ministry of Agricultural, Food, and Forestry Policies (MiPAAF)
  10. National Institute of Health (ISS) on behalf of the Ministry of Health (Italy)
  11. National Institute of Health Carlos III (Spain)
  12. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMw, The Netherlands)
  13. Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) on behalf of the Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Science, and Research (BMBWF)
  14. Ministry of Science and Technology (Israel)
  15. Formas (Sweden)

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In preschool children, very high adherence to the Mediterranean diet seemed to have a protective effect on cognition, while body mass index (BMI), influenced by the intake of white meat, was negatively associated with cognitive performance. These associations were independent of other factors such as maternal IQ estimates and parents' socioeconomic status.
Cognitive dysfunctions are a global health concern. Early-life diet and weight status may contribute to children's cognitive development. For this reason, we explored the associations between habitual food consumption, body mass index (BMI) and cognitive outcomes in 54 preschool children belonging to the Pisa birth Cohort (PISAC). We estimated groups of foods, nutrients and calorie intakes through a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) and Italian national databases. Then, we adopted the Mediterranean diet (MD) score to assess relative MD adherence. Cognition was examined using the Griffiths Mental Development Scales-Extended Revised (GMDS-ER). We found that higher, compared to low and moderate, adherence to MD was associated with higher performance scores. Furthermore, white meat consumption was positively related to BMI, and BMI (age-gender specific, z-scores) categories were negatively related to practical reasoning scores. All associations were independent of maternal IQ estimates, parents' socioeconomic status, exclusive/non-exclusive breastfeeding, actual age at cognitive assessment and gender. In conclusion, in preschool children, very high adherence to MD seemed protective, whereas BMI (reinforced by the intake of white meat) was negatively associated with cognition.

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