Growth and Development in Term Infants Fed Long-Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids: A Double-Masked, Randomized, Parallel, Prospective, Multivariate Study
Nancy Auestad, Robin Halter, Robert T. Hall, Mark M. Blatter, Margaret L. Bogle, Wesley Burks +9 more
PEDIATRICS
Abstract
These findings do not support adding AA+DHA to formulas containing 10% energy as linoleic acid and 1% energy as alpha-linolenic acid to enhance growth, visual acuity, information processing, general development, language, or temperament in healthy, term infants during the first 14 months after birth.infant development, breast feeding, infant formula, long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, docosahexaenoic acid.
Extracted Claims
1 claim extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
adding AA+DHA to formulas does not support enhancing growth, visual acuity, information processing, general development, language, or temperament in healthy, term infants during the first 14 months after birth
“These findings do not support adding AA+DHA to formulas containing 10% energy as linoleic acid and 1% energy as alpha-linolenic acid to enhance growth, visual acuity, information processing, general d...”