Now on ScienceBlogs: HeartlandGate: Anti-Science Institute's Insider Reveals Secrets

ScienceBlogs Book Club: Inside the Outbreaks

Neuron Culture

David Dobbs on science, nature, and culture.

Search

Profile

dobbspic I write articles on science, medicine, nature, culture and other matters for the New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Slate, National Geographic, Scientific American Mind, and other publications, and am working on my fourth book, The Orchid and the Dandelion, which expands on my recent December 2009 Atlantic article. In August 2010, I'll be moving to London for a year to work on the book. I'll also serve as a senior fellow at City University London's MA science journalism program.

You're encouraged to check out my third book Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral, which traces the strangest but most forgotten controversy in Darwin's career; subscribe to Neuron Culture by email; see more of my work at my main website; or track Twitter feed, my Google Reader shared items, or my Tumblr log, which gets it all.

Twitterature>

Twitter Updates

    Follow me on Twitter

    Worth Noting

    Recent Posts

    Recent Comments

    Categories

    « Of Mice and Moms (and the Snowball Effect of Stress) | Main | Neurologist Helen Mayberg in SciAm Mind »

    Breastfed Babies Bounce Back Better (or: Of Mice & Moms Redux)

    Posted on: August 3, 2006 7:28 PM, by David Dobbs

    No sooner had I noted that mouse pups seem to handle stress better when near their mothers than I found a study of some 9000 British kids showing that breastfeeding seems to make kids more resilient to stress even well after they've stopped breastfeeding. As the press release puts it,

    Breastfed babies cope better with stress in later life than bottle fed babies, suggests research published ahead of print in the Archives of Disease in Childhood

    The findings are based on almost 9000 children, who were part of the 1970 British Cohort Study, which regularly monitors a sample of the British population from birth onwards.

    Relevant information was obtained at the children's birth, and at the ages of 5 and 10 years, from midwives and health visitors, parents, and teachers. This included how much the child weighed at birth and whether s/he was breastfed.

    It also included factors that might influence or be linked with a child's reactions to stress and coping mechanisms, including maternal depression, parental education levels, their social class, and smoking.

    When the children were 10 years old, their teachers were also asked to rate the anxiety of their pupils on a scale of zero to 50, while parents were interviewed about major family disruption, including divorce or separation, which had occurred when their child was between 5 and 10 years of age.

    Unsurprisingly, when all the data were analysed, the findings pointed to a greater likelihood of high anxiety among children whose parents had divorced or separated. But children who had been breastfed were significantly less anxious than their peers who had not been breastfed. Breastfed children [of divorced parents] were almost twice as likely to be highly anxious, while children who had been bottle fed were over 9 times as likely to be highly anxious about parental divorce/separation.

    A ninefold increase instead of a twofold increase; that's a remarkable jump in vulnerability among the non-breastfed. The breastfed kids, in short, were about 1/4 as vulnerable as the nonbreastfed.

    What about breastfeeding might explain such resilience? The researchers didn't want to guess. Possibly breastfeeding gives some direct physiological benefit -- the milk itself contributes physiologically, say, in roughly the way that the antibodies in mother's milk make kids more resistant to infection. Goodness knows, breastfeeding gives so many other benefits, this wouldn't surprise me. On the other hand, the protective effect might simply come from because breastfeeding creates tighter bonds with the mothers, inspiring higher levels of maternal care.

    Animal studies, however, have shown that physical contact between mother and baby during the first few days of life bolsters neural and hormonal pathways important in stress responses, and that deprivation of maternal care creates hypersensitive stress systems. Moreover, as a good (if somewhat aging) research summary at NIMH describes, mere separation of rat pups from their mothers for 3 hours a day caused the mothers to give those pups less care, and the pups grew up excessively sensitive to stress all their lives; another paper finds such deprivation increases cell death in the pup's brain. Other studies, however, have shown that some of this deprivation effect can be reversed with some TLC -- or as one such paper put it, "tactile stimulation and feeding"; so it may well be that you can make up for a lack of breastfeeding with plenty of other TLC. (If you're really into this stuff, see this paper by Fleming et alia at U Toronto, "Mothering Begets Mothering," for how maternal care or deprivation in rats gets passed down through generations.)

    I certainly don't want to put the onus on moms, who get enough grief; the abundance of evidence about maternal deprivation exists partly because it's easy, experimentally, to deprive baby animals of their mothers and study the results. At any rate, if there's clearly a point here about the importance of maternal care, there's also a broader point about how early experience can affect later vulnerability to stress. At the same time, genetic studies are showing that such vulnerability also depends on genetic make-up, as in this 2000 paper with the straightforward title, "The Long-Term Effects of Maternal Deprivation Depend on the Genetic Background." .

    We're at an interesting time, it seems to me, as we begin to study the interlaced effects of experience and genes -- the so-called gene-environmnent interactions -- which toss aside the nature-nurture dichotomy and recognize life for what we naturally feel it to be: a dynamic loop in which what we are (our biology) constantly changes in response to what we experience (our environment).

    Share on Facebook
    Share on StumbleUpon
    Share on Facebook

    TrackBacks

    TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/89070

    Comments

    1

    Your report misses an important aspect of the research. In The Guardian write-up (I can't find the original research) the protective effect was still found when mothers only breastfed for a couple of weeks. From this you could conclude that to provide their babies with protection against stress, mothers only need to breastfeed for a couple of weeks.

    This is at odds with the overall tone of the reporting of this piece of research here and elsewhere which is: 'breast-feeding is good' and here's another reason why.

    What it actually might suggest is that babies need to be close to their mothers early in life. Breast-feeding will clearly result in this closeness early in life but simply holding the baby would have the same effect.

    Posted by: Jeremy Dean | August 4, 2006 2:04 PM

    2

    your article in "new scientist" sept 16-22 06
    is pure B S . you should dedicate it to the
    extreme liberal intelligensia.

    Posted by: kenneth i. rubin | September 15, 2006 8:34 PM

    Post a Comment

    (Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





    ScienceBlogs

    Search ScienceBlogs:

    Go to:

    Advertisement
    Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter

    © 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.