Spectral electroencephalographic correlates of iron status: Tired blood revisited |
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Authors: | Don M. Tucker Harold H. Sandstead |
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Affiliation: | United States Department of Agriculture, Science and Education Administration Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, Grand Forks, ND 58202 USA |
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Abstract: | For some time, clinical reports have described impairment of affective and cognitive functions in iron deficient persons. Recent studies suggest that both brain biochemistry and cognitive performance capacity may be disrupted by inadequate intake of dietary iron, but the relationship of the possible neurophysiological effects to psychological ones is unclear. To examine the relationship of iron status to simultaneous measures of cortical activation and cognitive performance, 8 channels of electroencephalographic (EEG) data were recorded during a resting period and during the performance of several cognitive tasks in two groups of men. The EEG data were spectrally analyzed, and measures of total power and frequency of peak power in each of several bands of the power spectrum for each channel were used as predictors in multiple regression analyses with serum iron and serum ferritin as alternative criteria. Measures of power in the delta frequency in the resting period appeared relevant to iron status in both groups, perhaps indicating alertness or arousal level. Consistently in these regressions, the asymmetry of the EEG appeared relevant to iron and ferritin. These findings suggest that the combination of EEG and performance measures may help characterize the neuropsychological effects of trace element nutrition. |
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Keywords: | Iron Ferritin Brain EEG Human |
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