Abstract
AbstractObjectiveChildhood obesity is a serious health concern that is not yet fully understood. Previous research has linked obesity with neurobehavioral factors such as behavior, cognition, and brain morphology. The causal directions of these relationships remain mostly untested.MethodsWe filled this gap by using the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study cohort comprising 11,875 children aged 9–10. First, correlations between body mass percentile and neurobehavioral measures were cross-sectionally analyzed. Effects were then aggregated by neurobehavioral domain for causal analyses. Direction of Causation twin modeling was used to test the direction of each relationship. Findings were validated by longitudinal cross-lagged panel modeling.ResultsBody mass percentile correlated with measures of impulsivity, motivation, psychopathology, eating behavior, and cognitive tests (executive functioning, language, memory, perception, working memory). Higher obesity was also associated with reduced cortical thickness in areas of the frontal and temporal lobe but with increased thickness in parietal and occipital brain areas. Similar although weaker patterns emerged for cortical surface area and volume. Twin modeling suggested causal effects of childhood obesity on eating behavior (β=.26), cognition (β=.05), cortical thickness (β=.15), and cortical surface area (β=.07). Personality/psychopathology (β=.09) and eating behavior (β=.16) appeared to causally influence childhood obesity. Longitudinal evidence broadly supported these findings. Results regarding cortical volume were inconsistent.ConclusionsResults supported causal effects of obesity on brain functioning and morphology, consistent with effects of obesity-related brain inflammation on cognition. The present study highlights the importance of physical health for brain development during childhood and may inform interventions aimed at preventing or reducing pediatric obesity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference75 articles.
1. Achenbach, T. M. , & Edelbrock, C. S. (1983). Manual for the Child Behavior Checklist and Revised Child Behavior Profile. University Associates in Psychiatry.
2. Inflammatory biomarkers and brain health indicators in children with overweight and obesity: The ActiveBrains project;Brain, Behavior, and Immunity,2019
3. Adise, S. , Allgaier, N. , Laurent, J. , Hahn, S. , Chaarani, B. , Owens, M. , Yuan, D. , Nyugen, P. , Mackey, S. , Potter, A. , & Garavan, H. P. (2021). Multimodal brain predictors of current weight and weight gain in children enrolled in the ABCD study ®. Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience,49(100948). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2021.100948
4. Body mass index and brain structure in healthy children and adolescents
5. Picky eating and child weight status development: a longitudinal study;Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics,2016