Department of Kinesiology and Community Health, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL, USA.
Division of Nutritional Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL, USA.
J Nutr. 2019 Dec 1;149(12):2255-2264. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxz206.
Hydration effects on cognition remain understudied in children. This is concerning since a large proportion of US children exhibit insufficient hydration.
This study investigated the effects of water intake on urinary markers of hydration and cognition among preadolescents.
A 3-intervention crossover design was used among 9- to 11-y-olds [n = 75 (43 males, 32 females); 58.2 ± 28.5 BMI percentile]. Participants maintained their water intake [ad libitum (AL)] or consumed high (2.5 L/d) or low (0.5 L/d) water for 4 d. The primary outcomes were performance on cognitive tasks requiring inhibition, working memory, and cognitive flexibility assessed using a modified flanker, go/no-go, and color-shape switch tasks, respectively. Secondary outcomes included urine hydration indices [i.e., color, urine specific gravity (USG), osmolality] assessed using 24-h urine collected during day 4 of each intervention. Repeated-measures ANOVAs were used to assess intervention effects.
There was a significant difference in hydration across all 3 interventions. Urine color during the low intervention [median (IQR): 6 (2)] was greater than during AL [5 (2)], and both were greater than during the high intervention [18 (0)] (all P ≤ 0.01). Similarly, osmolality [low (mean ± SD): 912 ± 199 mOsmol/kg, AL: 790 ± 257.0 mOsmol/kg, high: 260 ± 115 mOsmol/kg] and USG [low (mean ± SD): 1.023 ± 0.005, AL: 1.020 ± 0.007, high: 1.005 ± 0.004] during the low intervention were greater during AL, and both were greater than during the high intervention (all P ≤ 0.01). USG and osmolality AL values were related to switch task measures (β: 0.21 to -0.31, P < 0.05). Benefits of the high intervention were observed during the switch task, whereby participants exhibited 34% lower working memory cost relative to the low intervention. No significant changes in cognition were observed for the flanker and go/no-go tasks.
The water intervention improved urinary markers of hydration and had selective benefits during task switching. Furthermore, children's cognitive flexibility selectively benefits from greater habitual hydration and water intake. This study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02816450.
水合作用对儿童认知的影响仍在研究中。这令人担忧,因为很大一部分美国儿童存在水分不足的情况。
本研究旨在调查水合作用对青少年前儿童水摄入和认知的影响。
采用 9-11 岁儿童的 3 种干预交叉设计(n=75(43 名男性,32 名女性);BMI 百分位数为 58.2±28.5)。参与者保持水摄入[随意(AL)]或连续 4 天分别摄入高(2.5 L/d)或低(0.5 L/d)水。主要结果是使用改良的侧抑制、Go/No-Go 和颜色形状转换任务评估抑制、工作记忆和认知灵活性所需的认知任务的表现,分别为侧抑制、Go/No-Go 和颜色形状转换任务。次要结果包括通过 24 小时尿液收集评估 4 天干预期间的尿液水合指数[即尿液颜色、尿液比重(USG)、渗透压]。使用重复测量方差分析评估干预效果。
所有 3 种干预措施之间的水合作用存在显著差异。低干预期间的尿液颜色[中位数(IQR):6(2)]大于 AL[5(2)],两者均大于高干预期间的尿液颜色[18(0)](均 P≤0.01)。同样,高渗度[低(平均±SD):912±199 mOsmol/kg,AL:790±257.0 mOsmol/kg,高:260±115 mOsmol/kg]和 USG[低(平均±SD):1.023±0.005,AL:1.020±0.007,高:1.005±0.004]在低干预期间 AL 较高,两者均高于高干预期间(均 P≤0.01)。AL 时 USG 和渗透压值与转换任务测量值相关(β:0.21 至-0.31,P<0.05)。高干预的益处可在转换任务中观察到,与低干预相比,参与者的工作记忆成本降低了 34%。Flanker 和 Go/No-Go 任务的认知无显著变化。
水干预改善了尿液水合标志物,并且在任务转换时具有选择性益处。此外,儿童的认知灵活性选择性地受益于更高的习惯性水合作用和水摄入量。本研究在 clinicaltrials.gov 注册为 NCT02816450。