Department of Applied Psychology, New York University, New York, New York.
Department of Population Health, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York.
Dev Sci. 2020 Jan;23(1):e12860. doi: 10.1111/desc.12860. Epub 2019 Jun 14.
A well-established literature demonstrates executive function (EF) deficits in obese children and adults relative to healthy weight comparisons. EF deficits in obesity are associated with overeating and impulsive consumption of high calorie foods leading to excess weight gain and to problems with metabolic regulation and low-grade inflammation that detrimentally affect the structure and function of prefrontal cortex. Here, we test a complementary explanation for the relation between EF and body mass index (BMI) grounded in the energy demand of the developing brain. Recent work shows that the brain accounts for a lifetime peak of 66% of resting metabolic rate in childhood and that developmental changes in brain energetics and normative changes in body weight gain are closely inversely related. This finding suggests a trade-off in early childhood between energy used to support brain development versus energy used to support physical growth and fat deposition. To test this theorized energetic trade-off, we analyzed data from a large longitudinal sample (N = 1,292) and found that change in EF from age 3 to 5 years, as a proxy for brain development in energetically costly prefrontal cortex, is inversely related to change in BMI from age 2 to 5 years. Greater linear decline in BMI predicted greater linear increase in EF. We interpret this finding as tentative support for a brain-body energetic trade-off in early childhood with implications for lifetime obesity risk.
已有大量文献表明,肥胖儿童和成年人的执行功能(EF)相对于健康体重对照组存在缺陷。肥胖症中的 EF 缺陷与暴饮暴食和冲动性地摄入高热量食物有关,这会导致体重过度增加,以及代谢调节和低度炎症问题,从而对前额叶皮层的结构和功能造成损害。在这里,我们基于发育中大脑的能量需求,提出了一个关于 EF 和体重指数(BMI)之间关系的补充解释。最近的研究表明,在儿童时期,大脑占静息代谢率的终生峰值的 66%,并且大脑能量的发育变化与体重增加的正常变化密切负相关。这一发现表明,在幼儿期,大脑发育所需的能量与支持身体生长和脂肪沉积所需的能量之间存在权衡。为了检验这种理论上的能量权衡,我们分析了来自一个大型纵向样本(N=1292)的数据,发现从 3 岁到 5 岁的 EF 变化(作为前额叶皮层能量消耗高的大脑发育的替代指标)与从 2 岁到 5 岁的 BMI 变化呈负相关。BMI 的线性下降越大,EF 的线性增加就越大。我们将这一发现解释为对幼儿期大脑-身体能量权衡的初步支持,这对终生肥胖风险具有重要意义。