Siegel Emily H, Kordas Katarzyna, Stoltzfus Rebecca J, Katz Joanne, Khatry Subarna K, LeClerq Steven C, Tielsch James M
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
J Health Popul Nutr. 2011 Dec;29(6):593-604. doi: 10.3329/jhpn.v29i6.9896.
Despite concerns over the neurocognitive effects of micronutrient deficiencies in infancy, few studies have examined the effects of micronutrient supplementation on specific cognitive indicators. This study investigated, in 2002, the effects of iron-folic acid and/or zinc supplementation on the results of Fagan Test of Infant Intelligence (FTII) and the A-not-B Task of executive functioning among 367 Nepali infants living in Sarlahi district. Infants were enrolled in a cluster-randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial of daily supplementation with 5 mg of zinc, 6.25 mg of iron with 25 microg of folic acid, or zinc-iron-folic acid, or placebo. These were tested on both the tasks using five indicators of information processing: preference for novelty (FTII), fixation duration (FTII), accelerated performance (> or = 85% correct; A-not-B), deteriorated performance (< 75% correct and > 1 error on repeat-following-correct trails; A-not-B), and the A-not-B error (A-not-B). At 39 and 52 weeks, 247 and 333 infants respectively attempted the cognitive tests; 213 made an attempt to solve both the tests. The likelihood of females completing the A-not-B Task was lower compared to males when cluster randomization was controlled [odds ratio = 0.67; 95% confidence interval 0.46-0.97; p < 0.05]. All of the five cognitive outcomes were modelled in linear and logistic regression. The results were not consistent across either the testing sessions or the information-processing indicators. Neither the combined nor the individual micronutrient supplements improved the performance on the FTII or the A-not-B Task (p > 0.05). These findings suggest that broader interventions (both in terms of scope and duration) are needed for infants who face many biological and social stressors.
尽管人们担心婴儿期微量营养素缺乏对神经认知的影响,但很少有研究考察微量营养素补充剂对特定认知指标的影响。2002年,本研究调查了补充铁叶酸和/或锌对居住在萨拉希区的367名尼泊尔婴儿的法根婴儿智力测验(FTII)结果和执行功能的A非B任务的影响。婴儿参加了一项整群随机、安慰剂对照的临床试验,每天补充5毫克锌、6.25毫克铁和25微克叶酸,或锌铁叶酸,或安慰剂。使用信息处理的五个指标对这些婴儿进行了两项任务的测试:对新奇事物的偏好(FTII)、注视持续时间(FTII)、加速表现(≥85%正确;A非B)、表现恶化(<75%正确且在重复跟随正确轨迹时>1个错误;A非B)以及A非B错误(A非B)。在39周和52周时,分别有247名和333名婴儿尝试了认知测试;213名婴儿尝试完成了两项测试。在控制整群随机化的情况下,女性完成A非B任务的可能性低于男性[比值比=0.67;95%置信区间0.46 - 0.97;p<0.05]。所有五个认知结果都采用线性和逻辑回归模型进行分析。无论是在测试阶段还是信息处理指标方面,结果都不一致。联合或单独的微量营养素补充剂均未改善FTII或A非B任务的表现(p>0.05)。这些发现表明,对于面临许多生物和社会压力源的婴儿,需要更广泛的干预措施(在范围和持续时间方面)。