Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence

The brain undergoes rapid structural and functional changes during gestation and in the first two years of life. But brain development also continues throughout childhood and adolescence with cognitive abilities getting improved. Threats to the vulnerable Central Nervous System can have long-lasting...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kafouri, Salomi
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11814/
_version_ 1848791365202214912
author Kafouri, Salomi
author_facet Kafouri, Salomi
author_sort Kafouri, Salomi
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The brain undergoes rapid structural and functional changes during gestation and in the first two years of life. But brain development also continues throughout childhood and adolescence with cognitive abilities getting improved. Threats to the vulnerable Central Nervous System can have long-lasting effects throughout the foetal and neonatal periods and beyond infancy, on all aspects of development. This thesis investigates the long-term associations of prenatal tobacco exposure, as well as the long-term associations of breastfeeding with brain and cognitive development of adolescents. Further, it investigates the short-term effects of omega-3 supplementation on brain and cognition of school-aged children. These will be examined in order to identify solutions for optimal development, both at brain and cognitive level, for the new generation. The first study is entirely based on maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy association with cognitive development of adolescents. This study found no differences on cognitive development of exposed and non-exposed adolescents when maternal education was held constant in the two groups. The two subsequently studies examined long-term associations of breastfeeding duration with brain and cognition of adolescents. These studies found that breastfeeding duration was positively linked to intelligence and brain structures, such as caudate nucleus, which is vulnerable to environmental influences during critical periods of brain development. Lastly, the omega-3 supplementation study found no differences between active and placebo group on cognition but found associations between omega-3 fatty acids and brain microstructure thus hypothesizing that higher intake of ω-3 fatty acids can alter concentrations of specific ω-6 fatty acids thus influencing membrane fluidity. As such, our findings suggest that in order to obtain optimal brain and cognitive development, we do not only need to discard toxins or employ nutrients during critical periods of rapid brain development but also take into account other environmental and genetic factors that play vital role in children‘s development.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:27:21Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-11814
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:27:21Z
publishDate 2011
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-118142025-02-28T11:15:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11814/ Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence Kafouri, Salomi The brain undergoes rapid structural and functional changes during gestation and in the first two years of life. But brain development also continues throughout childhood and adolescence with cognitive abilities getting improved. Threats to the vulnerable Central Nervous System can have long-lasting effects throughout the foetal and neonatal periods and beyond infancy, on all aspects of development. This thesis investigates the long-term associations of prenatal tobacco exposure, as well as the long-term associations of breastfeeding with brain and cognitive development of adolescents. Further, it investigates the short-term effects of omega-3 supplementation on brain and cognition of school-aged children. These will be examined in order to identify solutions for optimal development, both at brain and cognitive level, for the new generation. The first study is entirely based on maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy association with cognitive development of adolescents. This study found no differences on cognitive development of exposed and non-exposed adolescents when maternal education was held constant in the two groups. The two subsequently studies examined long-term associations of breastfeeding duration with brain and cognition of adolescents. These studies found that breastfeeding duration was positively linked to intelligence and brain structures, such as caudate nucleus, which is vulnerable to environmental influences during critical periods of brain development. Lastly, the omega-3 supplementation study found no differences between active and placebo group on cognition but found associations between omega-3 fatty acids and brain microstructure thus hypothesizing that higher intake of ω-3 fatty acids can alter concentrations of specific ω-6 fatty acids thus influencing membrane fluidity. As such, our findings suggest that in order to obtain optimal brain and cognitive development, we do not only need to discard toxins or employ nutrients during critical periods of rapid brain development but also take into account other environmental and genetic factors that play vital role in children‘s development. 2011-03-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11814/1/Thesis_Final_7_2_2011.pdf Kafouri, Salomi (2011) Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Kafouri, Salomi
Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence
title Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence
title_full Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence
title_fullStr Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence
title_full_unstemmed Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence
title_short Nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence
title_sort nutrients and tobacco : short and long-term effects on brain and cognition in childhood and adolescence
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11814/