Kūmara Research Offers Hope For Sleep-deprived Parents
Kūmara could help boost babies’ microbiome, helping them sleep soundly and ward off viruses.
There’s fresh hope for
sleep-deprived parents, with a study into whether kūmara
boosts babies’ microbiome, potentially helping them sleep
soundly and ward off viruses.
The Waipapa Taumata Rau,
University of Auckland trial explores whether kūmara acts
as a prebiotic, fostering healthy bacteria in baby’s
microbiome, and supporting immune development and
sleep.
“One of the really critical periods in pregnancy
is very early on in the first trimester, and the other is
between when a baby's born till about five or six months of
age,” says Professor Clare Wall, principal investigator in
the SUN
study.
“What babies first eat and what they're
subjected to within their environment, really impacts on the
way they grow and develop,” says Professor
Wall.
“When we talk about growth, it's not only their
length and how much weight they gain, but it's also the
brain’s development, how their immune system develops,
and, how their metabolism gets set up,” Professor Wall
says.
“Those early stages really define your trajectory
for the rest of your life.”
There has been a lot of
research showing that breastfeeding supports the development
of the baby’s microbiome.
The microbiome refers to the
microorganisms that grow in and on the body, with the
largest concentration found in the large bowel.
“When a
baby's being breastfed, they have certain types of bacteria
that keep the bowel healthy and help the baby’s immune
system develop.
“But we don't know what happens when
you start introducing solid foods and how that impacts on
further development of the microbiome, but also of immune
competence and metabolic function,” Professor Wall
says.
“We know that the gut microbiome is very
important for signalling across the bowel into the body and
to the brain. This gut-brain axis is like a communication
network that connects with your immune system and other
important systems that regulate the way we process
food.
“But we don’t really know what optimal
nutrition is, particularly for developing the microbiome and
immunity.”
The SUN study is using kūmara, which is
already a popular food for babies. It also has prebiotics in
it. These are dietary fibres and certain carbohydrates which
nourish the bugs in the large bowel.
The study aims to
examine whether the kūmara does influence the baby’s
microbiome and, in turn immunity.
The researchers are
aiming to study 300 healthy babies, who are enrolled before
they start solids.
The researchers use babies’ stool
samples before and after starting solids to analyse the
effects of starting solid food, particularly kumara, on the
microbiome.
If willing, mothers can also provide stool
and breastmilk samples for analysis.
The study also
records other aspects of the mother’s and baby’s diet,
in order to assess the impact of breastfeeding and of
kūmara on baby, compared with a control group.
“What
mother eats affects their own microbiome and their
breastmilk. So we're trying to see what there's any
relationship between those things, and baby’s microbiome
and baby's immune competence,” Professor Wall says.
The
other aspect of the study is testing the effect on
sleep.
“When you feed your bugs in the microbiome in
your large bowel with carbohydrate-type foods, when they
break them down, they produce short-chain fatty acids. Those
short chain fatty acids provide energy and are really
important for keeping the gut healthy, but they also affect
the signalling pathway,” says Professor Wall.
“They
are taken up into the blood and are really important for
producing signals to the brain. Also, they can go to the
liver to get broken down to be used as energy. And it's felt
that some of those short-chain fatty acids provide us with
greater amounts of energy than the others. This in turn may
help babies sleep longer.”
The Sun study is funded by
MBIE as part of the High-Value Nutrition National Science
Challenge.
Trial manager, Dr Robyn Lawrence says the hope
is that dietitians will be able to provide good,
research-based advice to parents on what solids to introduce
babies to best help their long-term development.
“Being
a dietitian, I use a lot of research-informed evidence to
give people advice on what to feed their baby. And my view
is, if we don't have the research, we don't really have a
lot to base our recommendations on. So, our study is adding
to that evidence base, so that we can make good
recommendations for healthy babies and healthy
families.”