4.1 Article

Neurodevelopment, nutrition and genetics. A contemporary retrospective on neurocognitive health on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad, India

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.plefa.2022.102427

关键词

Brain; Nutrition; Mental ill health; Dietary fats; Essential fats; Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)

资金

  1. DSM
  2. Mead Johnson Nutrition
  3. ICMR, Government of India
  4. Mother and Child Foundation
  5. Waterloo Foundation
  6. Borne at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital
  7. Wellohi, China
  8. Suntory, Japan
  9. NIH grant from the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) [R01 AT007003]
  10. NIH grant from the Office of Dietary Supplements [R01 AT007003]

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This article highlights the progress made in nutrition knowledge over the past century and the major gaps in implementing that knowledge, with a focus on the celebration of the centenary of the National Institute of Nutrition in India. It points out the global issue of brain famine and the neglect of neurocognitive health in food policies. The importance of proper nutrition for mothers before conception and during pregnancy in ensuring intellectual development is emphasized. The article calls for placing the nutritional requirements for the brain at the top of the list in nutrition education and food policy.
In celebration of the centenary of the National Institute of Nutrition (NIN), Hyderabad, India (1918-2018), a symposium highlighted the progress in nutrition knowledge made over the century, as well as major gaps in implementation of that knowledge. Brain famine caused by a shortage of nutrients required for perinatal brain development has unfortunately become a global reality, even as protein-calorie famine was largely averted by the development of high yield crops. While malnutrition remains widespread, the neglect of global food policies that support brain development and maintenance are most alarming. Brain disorders now top the list of the global burden of disease, even with obesity rising throughout the world. Neurocognitive health, remarkably, is seldom listed among the non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and is therefore seldom considered as a component of food policy. Most notably, the health of mothers before conception and through pregnancy as mediated by proper nutrition has been neglected by the current focus on early death in non-neurocognitive NCDs, thereby compromising intellectual development of the ensuing generations. Foods with balanced essential fatty acids and ample absorbable micronutrients are plentiful for populations with access to shore-based foods, but deficient only a few kilometres away from the sea. Sustained access to brain supportive foods is a priority for India and throughout the world to enable each child to develop to their intellectual potential, and support a prosperous, just, and peaceful world. Nutrition education and food policy should place the nutritional requirements for the brain on top of the list of priorities.

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