Breakfast skipping in prepubertal obese children: hormonal, metabolic and cognitive consequences
Breakfast skipping in prepubertal obese children: hormonal, metabolic and cognitive consequences
Background and Aims: Skipping breakfast influences cognitive performance. The aim of our study was to investigate the relationship between the variation of hormonal and metabolic postprandial parameters induced by breakfast consumption or fasting and cognitive performance in obese children.
Methods: Cross-sectional study for repeated measures. Memory and attention assessment tests, hormones and nutrient oxidation were measured before and after consuming breakfast vs fasting in 10 prepubertal obese children.
Results: Fasting induced a significant (P<0.05) increase of the Overall Index of the Continuous Performance Test II (a global index of inattention) and the Test of Memory and Learning Word Selective Reminding (a test of verbal memory), whereas no changes were found after breakfast. Fasting was associated with a reduction of insulin and an increase in glucagon, with no changes in glucose. The increase in inattention was associated with a reduction of carbohydrate oxidation (?=?0.66, P<0.05). We found no difference in the area under the curve of peptide YY and glucagon-like peptide-1 after breakfast or fasting, whereas Ghrelin was significantly lower. No association between postprandial hormone variation and cognitive performance was found.
Conclusions: Attention and visual memory performance in the morning were reduced when the children skipped breakfast. No association was found with hormones or metabolic changes, but we did find an association with a reduction of carbohydrate oxidation. Nevertheless, these preliminary findings need confirmation in larger sample size.
children, obesity, hormones, nutrient balance, attention
314-321
Maffeis, C
c16612cd-2cca-4f18-9f26-329a5fe69515
Fornari, E
34da46ce-f77a-41c6-9be1-294b782b05d3
Surano, M G
38663719-566a-4907-a6cf-39b3f4b1059c
Comencini, E
aa1b2b67-ce9a-41ac-806f-810d843cfca2
Corradi, M
cc488dc9-94f8-4fca-ac28-a874134585c3
Tommasi, M
4b374076-dc67-4e8e-8103-ec0223e81941
Fasan, I
a0875d53-a37a-4083-b28d-e21765c4a2ca
Cortese, S
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
2012
Maffeis, C
c16612cd-2cca-4f18-9f26-329a5fe69515
Fornari, E
34da46ce-f77a-41c6-9be1-294b782b05d3
Surano, M G
38663719-566a-4907-a6cf-39b3f4b1059c
Comencini, E
aa1b2b67-ce9a-41ac-806f-810d843cfca2
Corradi, M
cc488dc9-94f8-4fca-ac28-a874134585c3
Tommasi, M
4b374076-dc67-4e8e-8103-ec0223e81941
Fasan, I
a0875d53-a37a-4083-b28d-e21765c4a2ca
Cortese, S
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Maffeis, C, Fornari, E, Surano, M G, Comencini, E, Corradi, M, Tommasi, M, Fasan, I and Cortese, S
(2012)
Breakfast skipping in prepubertal obese children: hormonal, metabolic and cognitive consequences.
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 66 (3), .
(doi:10.1038/ejcn.2011.206).
Abstract
Background and Aims: Skipping breakfast influences cognitive performance. The aim of our study was to investigate the relationship between the variation of hormonal and metabolic postprandial parameters induced by breakfast consumption or fasting and cognitive performance in obese children.
Methods: Cross-sectional study for repeated measures. Memory and attention assessment tests, hormones and nutrient oxidation were measured before and after consuming breakfast vs fasting in 10 prepubertal obese children.
Results: Fasting induced a significant (P<0.05) increase of the Overall Index of the Continuous Performance Test II (a global index of inattention) and the Test of Memory and Learning Word Selective Reminding (a test of verbal memory), whereas no changes were found after breakfast. Fasting was associated with a reduction of insulin and an increase in glucagon, with no changes in glucose. The increase in inattention was associated with a reduction of carbohydrate oxidation (?=?0.66, P<0.05). We found no difference in the area under the curve of peptide YY and glucagon-like peptide-1 after breakfast or fasting, whereas Ghrelin was significantly lower. No association between postprandial hormone variation and cognitive performance was found.
Conclusions: Attention and visual memory performance in the morning were reduced when the children skipped breakfast. No association was found with hormones or metabolic changes, but we did find an association with a reduction of carbohydrate oxidation. Nevertheless, these preliminary findings need confirmation in larger sample size.
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Published date: 2012
Keywords:
children, obesity, hormones, nutrient balance, attention
Organisations:
Clinical Neuroscience
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Local EPrints ID: 380402
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380402
ISSN: 0954-3007
PURE UUID: ac2dae5b-7b69-4450-9c55-53e19e090514
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Date deposited: 21 Aug 2015 16:25
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:52
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Contributors
Author:
C Maffeis
Author:
E Fornari
Author:
M G Surano
Author:
E Comencini
Author:
M Corradi
Author:
M Tommasi
Author:
I Fasan
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