Is Earlier Obesity Associated With Poorer Executive Functioning Later In Childhood? Findings From The Millennium Cohort Study

PEDIATRIC OBESITY(2021)

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摘要
Background Children affected with overweight or obesity have been associated with having lower educational achievement compared to peers who are non-overweight/obese. One of the drivers of this association could be a link between obesity and poorer executive function. Evidence is limited to small, cross-sectional studies which lack adjustment for important common causes.Objective We investigate the association between weight status and executive function longitudinally in mid-childhood, accounting for potential common causes.Methods Linear regression analyses were conducted to examine associations between weight status between 5 and 7 years and executive functioning at 11 years in members of the Millennium Cohort Study (n = 7739), accounting for a wide range of potential common causes. Age- and sex-specific International Obesity Taskforce cut-points for body mass index (BMI) were used. Executive function, including decision-making, impulsivity and spatial working memory, was assessed using the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery.Results There were no unadjusted associations between weight status and decision-making or impulsivity. After adjustment for all potential common causes, there was a lack of consistent evidence to support an association between persistent obesity (including overweight) between 5 and 7 years and spatial working memory task at 11 years.Conclusions We found little evidence that poorer spatial working memory contributes to the association of children with obesity having lower educational achievement.
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关键词
childhood, executive, function, obesity, overweight
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