| The more breast
  milk premature babies are fed while in neonatal intensive care, the greater
  the level of brain development, a study suggests. The cerebral
  cortex – the part of the brain for learning and thinking – is usually
  underdeveloped in premature babies, but in infants who consumed high levels of
  breast milk it quickly resembled those of babies born to term. Experts say
  that feeding premature babies with breast milk could help reduce the
  developmental and learning problems associated with preterm birth. Every year, 15
  million children worldwide are born pre-term - before 37 weeks - and it is
  still the biggest cause of death and disability among newborn babies. Children who
  are born early are more likely to develop problems that affect their entire
  lives such as learning difficulties, problems with their sight and hearing,
  behavioural issues and cerebral palsy. Researchers
  from University of Edinburgh scanned the brains of 212 babies who were part
  of the Theirworld Edinburgh Birth Cohort, a study which monitors the progress
  of premature babies from birth to adulthood. The group
  included 135 babies who were born before 32 weeks of pregnancy and 77 who
  were born to term. Researchers collected information about how premature
  babies were fed during neonatal intensive care and brain scans for all babies
  were performed around 40 weeks from conception. Brain scans
  revealed that babies who received higher amounts of breast milk – from their
  mother or a donor - had a more mature cerebral cortex compared with those who
  received less, similar to the scans of babies born to term. Breast milk
  contains many elements – such as a favourable balance of fats, proteins and
  minerals, and a range of other beneficial factors that help babies' immunity
  – that could support brain development, experts say. Further research is
  needed to understand their exact role in allowing premature babies’ brains to
  catch up with the development seen in term babies. The findings
  have been published in the Annals of Neurology: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ana.26559. The work was
  funded by Theirworld and took place at the Jennifer Brown Research Laboratory
  in the Medical Research Council Centre for Reproductive Health at the
  University of Edinburgh and the Simpson’s Centre for Reproductive Health at
  the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. The Jennifer
  Brown Research Laboratory was set up in 2004 at the University of Edinburgh
  as a pioneering project of Theirworld, the global children's charity. It
  works to better identify women at risk of premature birth, explore the
  development of treatments to prevent early labour and research how to better
  help newborn babies in the first hours and days after birth. Dr Gemma
  Sullivan, Senior Clinical Lecturer in Neonatal Neuroscience at the University
  of Edinburgh’s MRC Centre for Reproductive Health and a Consultant
  Neonatologist at NHS Lothian, said: “Our findings suggest that brain
  development in the weeks after preterm birth is improved in babies who
  receive greater amounts of breast milk. Mothers of preterm babies should be
  supported to express breast milk, if they are able to, whilst their baby is
  in the neonatal unit as this may offer the best chance of healthy brain
  development.” Sarah Brown,
  Chair of Theirworld, said: “The research and discoveries from the Theirworld
  Edinburgh Birth Cohort are truly remarkable. This world-first study is
  equipping scientists and doctors with valuable information that is expanding
  the frontiers of medical science and improving the life chances of premature
  babies. "I will
  forever be grateful to the families participating in the study who are
  dedicated to sharing information about their own babies, helping to give
  other premature babies the best start in life."  | 
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