ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Science

Study reveals that children with down syndrome love crispy, oily foods, and dislike sticky eatables

Washington [US], September 4 (ANI): According to a study, children with Down syndrome love crispy, oily foods and dislike brittle or sticky foods. However, these choices may result in a less healthy diet.

ANI Sep 04, 2022 15:17 IST googleads

Representative image

Washington [US], September 4 (ANI): According to a study, children with Down syndrome love crispy, oily foods and dislike brittle or sticky foods. However, these choices may result in a less healthy diet.
The result was published in the Journal of Texture Studies.
"Children with Down syndrome really enjoy foods like Pirate's Booty and puffed corn," said Carolyn Ross, a professor in WSU's School of Food Science. "Those foods aren't of high nutritional value, but they're dissolvable--a huge plus for these children. Now the challenge is making nutritious foods with those characteristics."
The paper examined what food textures children with Down syndrome liked or didn't like and how those preferences compared to typically developing children's preferences.
In the U.S., one in 772 babies (around 5,100 each year), are born with Down syndrome, a genetic condition caused by a full or partial extra copy of chromosome 21. Feeding and swallowing impairments are common, and a key predictor of increased death among those individuals.
It's been known for years that children with Down syndrome don't eat as much as typically developing children, but nobody has studied food textures as a factor. This research could help clinicians and parents determine what foods will get eaten, while hopefully prompting food manufacturers to tailor products to this population's specific needs, Ross said.
"This was a huge area of missing research," Ross said. "There are many anecdotal stories, and you can go down an online rabbit hole to find information. But studies like this can help parents and clinicians know what these children will be most likely to eat and help reduce incidences of choking. If we can add nutritional value to those foods, then we'll really help a lot of people."
Choking is one of the leading causes of death among people with Down syndrome because they may not chew food enough or "pack" it, overfilling their mouths and cheeks without swallowing.
Children with Down syndrome have various health issues, more than typically developing children, including feeding and swallowing challenges and food texture sensitivities. Ross wants to help children with Down syndrome have more healthy eating options and become more comfortable with complex textures.
"We want to help people understand what food textures children with Down syndrome prefer, and how to move them from things like pureed foods to texturally complex foods, which tend to have more nutritional value," Ross said.
Ross and her team sent boxes with 16 commercially available kinds of food to 218 children aged 11 to 18 in 30 states. Of those boxes, 111 went to children with Down syndrome, the rest to a control group of typically developing youth.
The boxes contained four items in each of four different texture groups to ensure that flavour wasn't the reason for a texture preference. The research team asked parents about disliked flavours before the boxes were sent, to avoid those products. All children in the study ate one of each item every day for a week to make sure enjoyment wasn't due to novelty.
The parents then filmed the children interacting with and eating each item, uploading the videos to the research team.
"We coded a lot of data; it's the biggest home-use test involving children with Down syndrome that we've ever heard of," Ross said. "And it showed a big difference in texture preference between children with and without Down syndrome." (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Researchers at the University of Bristol discovered that ancient frog ancestors survived the biggest mass extinction of species by eating on freshwater prey that evaded terrestrial predators.

Read More
Science

'Creation of black holes without singularities through gravity'

'Creation of black holes without singularities through gravity'

Traditional black holes, as predicted by Albert Einstein's theory of General Relativity, contain what are known as singularities, i.e. points where the laws of physics break down. Identifying how singularities are resolved in the context of quantum gravity is one of the fundamental problems in theoretical physics. Now, a team of experts has described the creation of regular black holes from gravitational effects without the need for the existence of exotic matter required by some previous models.

Read More
Science

Gut microbes play role in regulating stress responsiveness

Gut microbes play role in regulating stress responsiveness

A groundbreaking study has revealed the critical role of gut bacteria in regulating stress responses through interactions with the body's circadian rhythms.

Read More
Science

Biomarker may predict response to immunotherapy in liver cancer

Biomarker may predict response to immunotherapy in liver cancer

According to a preclinical study conducted by Weill Cornell Medicine researchers, it may soon be feasible to detect whether individuals with hepatocellular carcinoma, a kind of liver cancer, may benefit from immunotherapy.

Read More
Science

Study finds novel approach to treat neurological diseases

Study finds novel approach to treat neurological diseases

The matter of what causes complicated neurological disorders like Alzheimer's or multiple sclerosis continues to perplex scientists and doctors, with unknowns impeding early diagnosis and successful treatment.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.