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Human metabolic adaptations and prolonged expensive neurodevelopment: A review

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  • معلومة اضافية
    • الموضوع:
      2008
    • Collection:
      Nature Precedings
    • نبذة مختصرة :
      1. After weaning, human hunter-gatherer juveniles receive substantial (≈3.5-7 MJ day^-1^), extended (≈15 years) and reliable (kin and nonkin food pooling) energy provision. 2. The childhood (pediatric) and the adult human brain takes a very high share of both basal metabolic rate (BMR) (child: 50-70%; adult: ≈20%) and total energy expenditure (TEE) (child: 30-50%; adult: ≈10%). 3. The pediatric brain for an extended period (≈4-9 years-of-age) consumes roughly 50% more energy than the adult one, and after this, continues during adolescence, at a high but declining rate. Within the brain, childhood cerebral gray matter has an even higher 1.9 to 2.2-fold increased energy consumption. 4. This metabolic expensiveness is due to (i) the high cost of synapse activation (74% of brain energy expenditure in humans), combined with (ii), a prolonged period of exuberance in synapse numbers (up to double the number present in adults). Cognitive development during this period associates with volumetric changes in gray matter (expansion and contraction due to metabolic related size alterations in glial cells and capillary vascularization), and in white matter (expansion due to myelination). 5. Amongst mammals, anatomically modern humans show an unique pattern in which very slow musculoskeletal body growth is followed by a marked adolescent size/stature spurt. This pattern of growth contrasts with nonhuman primates that have a sustained fast juvenile growth with only a minor period of puberty acceleration. The existence of slow childhood growth in humans has been shown to date back to 160,000 BP. 6. Human children physiologically have a limited capacity to protect the brain from plasma glucose fluctuations and other metabolic disruptions. These can arise in adults, during prolonged strenuous exercise when skeletal muscle depletes plasma ...
    • Relation:
      http://precedings.nature.com/documents/1856/version/2; oai:nature.com:10101/npre.2008.1856.2; http://hdl.handle.net/10101/npre.2008.1856.2
    • الدخول الالكتروني :
      http://precedings.nature.com/documents/1856/version/2
      http://hdl.handle.net/10101/npre.2008.1856.2
    • Rights:
      Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
    • الرقم المعرف:
      edsbas.D7AB6994