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Tue, May 30, 2023 | 14:30
-------------------------
Breastfeeding may reduce Alzheimer's risk
모유수유 알츠하이머 치매 막아
Posted : 2013-08-06 16:37
Updated : 2013-08-06 16:37
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Alzheimer's risk is highly correlated with breastfeeding, scientists found, according to The Science Daily Aug. 5.

The report, newly published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, suggests that the link may have something be to do with certain biological effects of breastfeeding.



For example, breastfeeding restores insulin tolerance which is significantly reduced during pregnancy, and Alzheimer's is characterized by insulin resistance in the brain.


Although they used data gathered from a very small group of just 81 British women, the researchers observed a highly significant and consistent correlation between breastfeeding and Alzheimer's risk.

They argue that this was so strong that any potential sampling error was unlikely.


At the same time, however, the connection was much less pronounced in women who already had a history of dementia in their family.

The research team hopes that the study - intended merely as a pilot - will stimulate further research looking at the relationship between female reproductive history and disease risk.


The findings may point towards new directions for fighting the global Alzheimer's epidemic - especially in developing countries where cheap, preventative measures are desperately needed.

More broadly, the study opens up new lines of enquiry in understanding what makes someone susceptible to Alzheimer's in the first place.

It may also act as an incentive for women to breastfeed, rather than bottle-feed - something which is already known to have wider health benefits for both mother and child.


Dr. Molly Fox, from the Department of Biological Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, who led the study, said, "Alzheimer's is the world's most common cognitive disorder and it already affects 35.6 million people.

In the future, we expect it to spread most in low- and middle-income countries. So it is vital that we develop low-cost, large-scale strategies to protect people against this devastating disease."


Previous studies have already established that breastfeeding can reduce a mother's risk of certain other diseases, and research has also shown that there may be a link between breastfeeding and a woman's general cognitive decline later in life.

Until now, however, little has been done to examine the impact of breastfeeding duration on Alzheimer's risk.


Fox and her colleagues – Prof. Carlo Berzuini and Prof. Leslie Knapp - interviewed 81 British women aged between 70 and 100. These included both women with, and without, Alzheimer's. In addition, the team also spoke to relatives, spouses and carers.

Through these interviews, the researchers collected information about the women's reproductive history, their breastfeeding history, and their dementia status.

They also gathered information about other factors that might account for their dementia, for example, a past stroke, or brain tumor.


Dementia status itself was measured using a standard rating scale called the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR).

The researchers also developed a method for estimating the age of Alzheimer's sufferers at the onset of their disease, using the CDR as a basis and taking into account their age and existing, known patterns of Alzheimer's progression. All of this information was then compared with the participants' breastfeeding history.


Despite the small number of participants, the study revealed a number of clear links between breastfeeding and Alzheimer's.

These were not affected when the researchers took into account other potential variables such as age, education history, the age when the woman first gave birth, her age at menopause, or her smoking and drinking history.


The researchers observed three main trends: Women who breastfed exhibited a reduced Alzheimer's Disease risk compared with women who did not; Longer breastfeeding history was significantly associated with a lower Alzheimer's Risk; Women who had a higher ratio of total months pregnant during their life to total months breastfeeding had a higher Alzheimer's risk.

The trends were, however, far less pronounced for women who had a parent or sibling with dementia. In these cases, the impact of breastfeeding on Alzheimer's risk appeared to be significantly lower, compared with women whose families had no history of dementia.

The study argues that there may be a number of biological reasons for the connection between Alzheimer's and breastfeeding, all of which require further investigation.

One theory is that breastfeeding deprives the body of the hormone progesterone, compensating for high levels of progesterone which are produced during pregnancy. Progesterone is known to desensitize the brain's estrogen receptors, and estrogen may play a role in protecting the brain against Alzheimer's.

Another possibility is that breastfeeding increases a woman's glucose tolerance by restoring her insulin sensitivity after pregnancy. Pregnancy itself induces a natural state of insulin resistance.

This is significant because Alzheimer's is characterized by a resistance to insulin in the brain (and therefore glucose intolerance) to the extent that it is even sometimes referred to as "Type 3 diabetes."


"Women who spent more time pregnant without a compensatory phase of breastfeeding therefore may have more impaired glucose tolerance, which is consistent with our observation that those women have an increased risk of Alzheimer's disease," Fox added.




모유수유 알츠하이머 치매 막아

모유를 많이 먹인 여성일수록 나중 알츠하이머 치매에 걸릴 가능성이 적다는 연구결과가 나왔다.

    영국 케임브리지 대학 생물인류학교수 몰리 폭스 박사가 치매 환자를 포함한 70~100세의 영국 여성 81명을 대상으로 실시한 조사분석 결과 이 같은 사실이 밝혀졌다고 데일리 메일 인터넷판과 사이언스 데일리가 5일 보도했다.

    모유를 먹여 아이를 키운 여성은 조제유를 먹인 여성에 비해 나중 치매를 겪을 가능성이 평균 64% 적은 것으로 나타났다고 폭스 박사는 밝혔다. 

    모유를 먹인 기간이 길수록 치매 위험은 낮아졌다. 1년 동안 모유를 먹인 여성은 4개월 모유를 먹인 여성에 비해 치매 발생률이 22% 낮았다.  

    또 평생 임신한 총개월 수와 모유를 수유한 총개월 수의 비율이 높을수록 치매 위험은 높아지는 경향을 보였다.  

    이는 모유 수유가 치매 위험 감소와 분명히 연관이 있음을 보여주는 것이다.

    연령, 교육수준, 첫 출산 연령, 폐경 연령, 흡연, 음주 등 치매와 관련된 다른 위험요인들을 고려했지만 이러한 연관성에는 변함이 없었다.

    다만 부모나 형제자매 중에 치매환자가 있는 여성은 치매 가족력이 없는 여성에 비해 모유 수유에 의한 치매 위험 감소 효과가 현저히 떨어지는 것으로 나타났다.  

    폭스 박사는 모유 수유가 치매 위험을 낮추는 데 도움이 되는 이유로 임신 중 증가한 호르몬 프로게스테론을 모유 수유가 다시 감소시킨다는 점을 지적했다.  

    프로게스테론은 뇌를 보호하는 뇌세포의 에스트로겐 수용체 민감성을 감소시키는 것으로 알려져 있다.  

    또 하나의 이유로 그는 모유 수유가 임신으로 둔화된 인슐린 민감성을 회복시켜 뇌세포의 내당능(glucose tolerance)이 높아진다는 사실을 들었다.  

    치매환자의 뇌세포는 인슐린 저항성을 보인다. 치매가 '3형 당뇨병'으로 불리는 것도 이 때문이다. 

    이 연구결과는 '알츠하이머병 저널'(Journal of Alzheimer's Disease) 최신호에 발표됐다.

 
 
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