Handbook of Dietary and Nutritional Aspects of Bottle Feeding 2014
DOI: 10.3920/978-90-8686-223-8_6
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6. The sensory world of formula-fed infants: differences among artificial milk feedings in flavor learning and satiation

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Cited by 4 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Our findings are clinically meaningful because CMF accounts for the vast majority of infant formula sales in America (2) and the infants who are fed breast milk substitutes, like the participants in this RCT, are more likely to be black Americans (32), who are at particular risk of later obesity (33). Research is needed to determine the mechanisms by which diet composition and rapid weight gain during sensitive periods of development (1,12) program risks for later diseases (28)(29)(30)(31).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…Our findings are clinically meaningful because CMF accounts for the vast majority of infant formula sales in America (2) and the infants who are fed breast milk substitutes, like the participants in this RCT, are more likely to be black Americans (32), who are at particular risk of later obesity (33). Research is needed to determine the mechanisms by which diet composition and rapid weight gain during sensitive periods of development (1,12) program risks for later diseases (28)(29)(30)(31).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Nor can the group differences be attributed to the taste or aroma of the formulas. Infants were introduced to EHF at age 0.75 mo, which is during the early sensitive period of taste acceptance (1). During each of the 14 monthly compliance checks, they were fed their assigned formulas to satiation and were perceived by their mothers as enjoying the taste of the formula.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Before their first taste of foods, they learn, like other animals, what their mother's diet “tastes like” since dietary flavors are transmitted to amniotic fluid and then mother's milk ( 42 ). These multiple routes of flavor learning suggest that there is redundancy of dietary information, providing complementary routes for the young to learn about the types of safe foods available in the environment before they themselves begin to eat (or forage on) foods ( 43 , 44 ). Mothers eating diets rich in healthy foods transmit these flavors to amniotic fluid and mother's milk—when you feed a mother, you feed a child.…”
Section: Key Biological Inputs Of Appetite Regulationmentioning
confidence: 99%