Premastication

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Premastication, pre-chewing, or kiss feeding is the act of chewing food for the purpose of physically breaking it down in order to feed another that is incapable of masticating the food by themselves. This is often done by the mother or relatives of a baby to produce baby food capable of being consumed by the child during the weaning process. The chewed food in the form of a bolus is transferred from the mouth of one individual to another, either directly mouth-to-mouth, via utensils, hands, or is further cooked or processed prior to feeding.[1][2]

The behaviour was common throughout human history and societies and observed in non-human animals. While premastication is less common in present day Western societies it was commonly practiced, and is still done in more traditional cultures.[3] Although the health benefits of premastication is still being actively studied the practice appears to confer certain nutritional and immunological benefits to the infant,[4] provided that the caretaker is in good health and not infected by pathogens.[5]

Behavioural roots

Premastication and mouth-to-mouth feeding in humans is postulated to have evolved from the regurgitation of food from parent to offspring or male to female (courtship feeding) and has been observed in numerous mammals and animals of other species.[6] For instance, food begging behaviour observed in young wolves, wild dogs and certain gulls species, which involves the young approaching the beak or mouth of the adult with their own whereupon gaping their mouths or nuzzling, the adult would regurgitate portions of food to feed the young.[7] However in the forementioned animals, this nuzzling behaviour and other types of mouth-to-mouth contact is also used for bonding, socialization, and courtship.[8]

In Apes

Young orangutans also beg for food by such contact and accordingly their caretakers regurgitate to feed them.[9] Indeed, behaviours of mouth to mouth feeding of premasticated food and ritualized mouth to mouth contact for bonding has been observed in anthropoid great apes such as gorillas, orangutans, and chimpanzees. All of this supports the idea that human behaviours of kissing and feeding of premastication foods, either directly or indirectly from the mouth, has it behavioural roots in higher animals and ancestral great apes.[10]

Human Kiss Precursor

In all human cultures premastication/kiss-feeding or kissing between mother and infant has been observed in all with kissing believed to be a socially ritualized form of feeding premasticated food. The similarities between kiss-feeding and human kisses (e.g. French kiss) are very similar in their executions; in the former, the tongue is used to push food from mother to child with the child receiving both the mother's food and tongue in sucking movements, and the latter simply forgoes the premasticated food.[8] In fact, observations across various species and cultures confirms that the act of kissing and premastication have most likely evolved from the similar relationship-based feeding behaviours.[6][8]

History and culture

Written records of premastication have been found in Ancient Egypt, though the practice likely extends back into prehistoric times to non-human ancestors.[11] For instance, in the Ancient Egyptian Ebers medical papyrus, a mother was instructed to give medical remedy to a child through premastication.[12] In the fifth century A.D. Roman culture, premastictaion of infant's food by caretakers were also common, though the lack of sanitation along with the practice contributed to infant mortality.[13] Infants in Medieval Europe were fed an assortment of mashed, premasticated food or bread softened with liquids.[14]

Due to the attitudes in Western medicine of the 1940s and 1950s, Native American and Fijian cultures and societies were strongly disssuaded from premastication due to concerns for the hygiene of the practice. However, the lack of knowledge regarding premastication and its prohibition by missionaries and doctors instead caused severe anemia in the infants of the population,[15] or resulted in malnuorished infants and children deprived of nourishment.[16]

Although less prevalent in modern post-industrial Western societies, the offering of premasticated foods to infants is found in many traditional cultures and offers their infant numerous benefits.[17] In North America, premastication is still commonly used by in Black and Hispanic mothers,[18] and commonly used by women of Inuit and Aleut peoples.[19]

In many human cultures, the act of premastication and direct mouth-to-mouth feeding is linked with the showing of affection, known as kiss feeding.[8][11] In the Manus cultures of the Admiralty Islands, the act of premastication has been used by a women to remind children and descendants of their obligations to her.[20] Some human cultures such as the people of Papua New Guinea in fact use mouth to mouth contact primarily for feeding premasticated food, with sexual kissing only observed after the arrival of Europeans.[21] This form of feeding is believed to have evolved into the modern human acts of kissing and French kissing.[8]

Many Western societies have strong aversions toward premastication, which have been compared to their similar criticisms and aversion towards breastfeeding in previous generations for similar rationale;[3] with the same societies finding breastfeeding to be a disagreeable practice practiced only by the uneducated lower classes or untempered foreign cultures.[22] For instance, in late 1800s the medical community of Texas was embroiled in a debate on premastication, with those supporting the practice arguing its benefits, while though against it stating that it is "filthy and replusive and... barbaric". [12]

Health

The act of premastication is commonly found in all human societies and populations, although it is less prevalent in some than others. The evolution and selective advantage of premastication behaviours is that it supplements the infant diet of breast milk by providing access to more macro- and micro-nutrients. Although disease can be transmitted through saliva in the pre-chewed foods, the benefits conferred outweighed any risks of the practice during the evolution of human behaviour.[3] Furthermore, discouraging premastication as prevention to disease transmittion may prove as disastrous an infant public health policy as when infants breastfeeding was discouraged in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[23] In the end, the potential benefits and pitfalls of this practice greatly depend on the dietary and medical circumstances of the mother and child.[24] The true scope of the benefits of premastication and its prevalences in differenct societies is still under active research, though there appears to be some consensus on the nutritional benefits of the practice.[4]

Advantages

Breastmilk supplement

Premastication is complementary to breastfeeding in the health practices of infants and young children, providing large amounts of carbohydrate and protein nutrients not always available through breast milk,[3] and micronutrients such as iron, zinc, and vitamin B12 which are essential nutrients present mainly in meat.[25] Compounds in the saliva, such as haptocorrin also helps increase B12 availability by protecting the vitamin against stomach acid.

Infant intake of heme iron

Meats such as beef were likely premasticated during human evolution as hunter-gatherers. This animal-derived bioinorganic iron source is shown to confer benefits to young children (two years onwards) by improving growth, motor, and cognitive functions.[26] In earlier times, premastication was an important practice that prevented infant iron deficiency.[27]

Meats provide Heme iron that are more easily absorbed by human physiology and higher in bioavailability than non-heme irons sources,[28][29] and is a recommended source of iron for infants.[30]

Anti-allergy and immunological benefits

The infant can benefit from immunological resistance to infections and immunological hypersensitivity such as asthma can be inhibited through the antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, growth factors, and nutrient transporters in the mother's saliva.[3] Related to the hygiene hypothesis, it is postulated that early childhood exposure to rich microflora from premastictaion may be important in priming the immune system and reducing allergic responses.[3]

Premastication may itself promote the development of infant immune systems through antibody generators in the mother's saliva, which help prevent the development of allergies in the infant.[24] Early infant feeding of premasticated foods such as eggs and nuts alongside breastfeeding, could help promote immune tolerance help moderate allergic responses. The practice of premastication is postulated to play an important role in the development of oral immunotolerance and help prevent the occurrence of autoimmune diseases in the infant. Although the rise in allergic and autoimmune diseases in Western societies have not been directly linked to the decrease of premastication in these same societies, researchers believe that these two phenomena are related.[24][31]

Parental enzymes

Premasticated foods allow for better infant digestion through the presence of saliva enzymes lacking in infants.[3] Alpha-amylase from maternal saliva aids in digestion of starches fed to a baby. This may be important in the developed nations since "...milk supplements containing starch are used frequently and if these are introduced into feeds at an early stage, digestion of the starch will require the action of salivary amylase..."[32] Children being fed mainly plant based diets by vegetarian parents also benefit from the more prevalent and different types of digestive enzymes in premasticated food.[33] Fat digesting lingual lipase in adult saliva can also help infant digestion and fat absorption since infants generally do not produce enough of these enzymes in their digestive tracts to efficiently process the fats they consume.[34]

Disadvantages

Transmission of diseases

Premastication can transmit a wide range of diseases and pathogens from infected parents to their infants through the parents' saliva and open mouth ulcers, including HIV-AIDS as well as possibly hepatitis B virus, Helicobacter pylori.[5][35] Given that the prevalence of HIV in population of lower-income and poorer nation-states who practice premastication extensively, the practice is likely an important method for transmission of the virus in their populations.[5] In Chile, the practice is also associated with HIV transmission from caregivers who were unaware of their infection to children under their care.[36]

Some state that since most mothers in the West will already know if they are carrying HIV or other serious infectious agents, mothers exercising caution who wish to breastfeed or premasticate for their children should not be dissuaded by experts who use science to justify their own personal disapproval.[37]

Establishment of cavity causing bacteria

Dental caries causing bacteria from the mother's oral ecology can be transmitted to the infant through the saliva, resulting in bacterial colonization and a strong predisposition to tooth decay in the child.[38][39]

In popular culture

In March 2012 Alicia Silverstone uploaded video of herself kiss-feeding her son.[40] In response to the media focus and criticism, she made a statement that its been going on for thousands of years, and is perfectly natural.[41][42][43][44][45]

Although this practice is more common in the West Coast, for many in the United States the practice is still consider unpleasant to see or too "intimate" to be practiced in public.[46]

See also

References

  1. Holmes, Wendy (2007), "Influences on maternal and child nutrition in the highlands of the northern Lao PDR", Asia Pac J Clin Nutr 16 (3): 537–545, PMID 17704036 
  2. Zhang, Yuanyuan (2007-05), "The role of pre-mastication in the evolution of complementary feeding strategies: a bio-cultural analysis", Cornell University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Honors Theses 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Pelto, Greta; Zhang, Yuanyuan; Habicht, Jean-Pierre (January 2010), "Premastication: the second arm of infant and young child feeding for health and survival?", Journal of Maternal and Child Nutrition (Blackwell Publishing Ltd) 6 (1): 4–18, doi:10.1111/j.1740-8709.2009.00200.x 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Aggett, Peter (2010), "Premastication", Maternal and Child Nutrition (Blackwell Publishing Ltd) 6: 2–3, doi:10.1111/j.1740-8709.2009.00226.x 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Levison, Judy; Gillespie, Susan L.; Montgomery, Elizabeth (2011), "Think twice before recommending pre-masticated food as a source of infant nutrition", Maternal & Child Nutrition (Blackwell Publishing Ltd) 7 (1): 104, doi:10.1111/j.1740-8709.2010.00289.x 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Eibl-Eibesfeldt, Irenäus (1971), Love and hate: the natural history of behavior patterns, Aldine Transaction, ISBN 978-0202020389 
  7. Wilson, Edward O. (1980), Sociobiology, Harvard University Press 
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 Eibl-Eibesfeldt, Irenäus (1983), "Chapter 3: A comparative approach to human ethology", in Rajecki, D. W., Comparing behavior: studying man studying animals, Routledge 
  9. Russon, Anne E.; Bard, Kim A.; Parker, Sue Taylor, Reaching Into Thought:The Minds of the Great Apes, Cambridge University Press, Nov 26, 1998 
  10. Eibl-Eibesfeldt, Irenäus (Oct 30), Human Ethology, Transaction Publishers, p. 138 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Kirshenbaum, Sheril (Jan 5, 2011), The Science of Kissing: What Our Lips Are Telling Us, Hachette Digital, Inc. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 Radbill, Samuel X. (October 1981), "Infant Feeding through the Ages", CLIN PEDIATR 20 (10): 613–621 
  13. Soren, David; Soren, Noelle (1999), A Roman Villa and a Late Roman Infant Cemetery:Excavation at Poggio Gramignano, Lugnano in Teverina, L'ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER 
  14. Forgeng, Jeffrey L.; Singman, Jeffrey L. (1999), Daily Life in Medieval Europe, Greenwood Publishing Group 
  15. Pijoan, M; Elkin, C.A. (1944), "Secondary anemia due to prolonged and exclusive milk feeding among Shoshone indian infants", Journal of Nutrition: 67–75 
  16. Robertson, A. F. S. (1990), Food and Nutrition in Fiji: Food production, composition, and intake, editorips usp.ac.fj, pp. 331–392 
  17. Konner, Melvin (May 31, 2010), The Evolution of Childhood: Relationships, Emotion, Mind, Harvard University Press 
  18. Andrews, Margaret M.; Boyle, Joyceen S. (2008), Transcultural Concepts in Nursing Care (5 ed.), Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 
  19. Sprott, Julie E. (1992), Alaska Native Parents in Anchorage:Perspectives on Childrearing, University Press of America 
  20. Schwartz, Theodore (1975), "Relations among generations in Time-Limited Cultures", Ethnos 3 (2): 309–322, doi:10.1525/eth.1975.3.2.02a00150 
  21. Bailey, K. V. (1963), "Premastication of infant food in the New Guinea Highlands.", South Pacific Commission, Technical. Information Circular. 61 (1): 1–3 
  22. Nathoo, Tasnim; Ostry, Aleck (Jun 1, 2009), The One Best Way?: Breastfeeding History, Politics, and Policy in Canada, Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 
  23. Pelto, Gretel H.; Habicht, Jean-Pierre (2011), "Letter to the Editor: Discouraging premastication may do more harm than good: Response to the letter by Levison et al. 2010", Maternal and Child Nutrition 7: 105–106 
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 Van Esterik, Penny; Williams, Anthony; Fewtrell, Mary S.; Tolboom, Jules J.M.; Lack, Gideon; Penagos, Martin (January 2010), "Commentaries on Premastication: the second arm of infant and young child feeding for health and survival? By Gretel Pelto, Yuanyuan Zhang & Jean-Pierre Habicht", Maternal & Child Nutrition 6 (1): 19–26, doi:10.1111/j.1740-8709.2009.00227.x 
  25. Hambidge, Jamie E (2006-02), "Meat as a First Complementary Food for Breastfed Infants: Feasibility and Impact on Zinc Intake and Status", Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology & Nutrition 42 (2): 207–214, doi:10.1097/01.mpg.0000189346.25172.fd 
  26. Hambidge, K Michael; Sheng, Xiaoyang; Mazariegos, Manolo; Jiang, Tianjiang; Garces, Ana; Li, Dinghua; Westcott, Jamie; Tshefu, Antoinette; Sami, Neelofar; Pasha, Omrana; Chomba, Elwyn; Lokangaka, Adrien; Goco, Norman; Manasyan, Albert; Wright, Linda L; Koso-Thomas, Marion; Bose, Carl; Goldenberg, Robert L; Carlo, Waldemar A; McClure, Elizabeth M; Krebs, Nancy F (2011), "Evaluation of meat as a first complementary food for breastfed infants: impact on iron intake", Nutrition Reviews (Blackwell Publishing Inc) 69: S57–S63, doi:10.1111/j.1753-4887.2011.00434.x 
  27. Stoltzfus, Rebecca J. (2011), Iron Interventions for Women and Children in Low-Income Countries 141 (4), Journal of Nutrition, pp. 756S–762S, doi:10.3945/jn.110.128793 
  28. Hurrell, Richard; Egli, Ines (2010), "Iron bioavailability and dietary reference values", American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 91 (5): 1461S–1467S 
  29. Dietary Supplement Fact Sheet: Iron, National Institute of Health, USA, August 24, 2007 
  30. "Recommendations to Prevent and Control Iron Deficiency in the United States", CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) 47 (RR-3), April 3, 1998: 1–36 
  31. Velasquez-Manoff, Moises (Sep 4, 2012), An Epidemic of Absence: A New Way of Understanding Allergies and Autoimmune Diseases, Simon and Schuster 
  32. Butterworth, Peter J.; Warren, Frederick J.; Ellis, Peter R. (2011), "Human α-amylase and starch digestion: An interesting marriage", Starch - Stärke (WILEY-VCH Verlag) 63 (7): 395–405, doi:10.1002/star.201000150 
  33. Sisson, Mark (April 2012), "Should You Chew Your Child’s Food?", Mark's Daily Apple 
  34. Babyatsky, Mark W. (2004), "Developmental biology of the gastrointestinal tract", in James L. Abbruzzese, Gastrointestinal Oncology, Oxford University Press 
  35. Altman, Lawrence K. (2008-02-07), "Pre-Chewed Baby Food Said to Transmit H.I.V.", New York Times 
  36. Labraña, Y; Alvarez, AM; Villarroel, J; E (2013), "[Premastication: a new way of transmitting HIV. First pediatric case reported in Chile]", Revista Chilena de Infectologia : Organo Oficial de la Sociedad Chilena de Infectologia 30 (2): 221-222 
  37. Gray, Noah (2012-03-29), "Is Pre-mastication Dangerous for Baby? Let's Look at the Scientific Literature.", Huffington Post 
  38. Diane, Mapes (March 30, 2010), "Mom's kiss can spread cavities to baby", NBC News 
  39. Douglass, JM; Li, Y; Tinanoff, N. (Sep–Oct 2008), "Association of mutans streptococci between caregivers and their children.", Pediatric Dentistry 30 (5): 375–87 
  40. Silverstone, Alicia. "home video: breakfast with baby bear". The Kind Life. Retrieved 2012-09-03. 
  41. Leader, T.h. (2012-04-09), "Alicia Silverstone defends controversial practice of pre-chewing baby son's food | Mail Online", Daily Mail, retrieved 2012-05-03 
  42. Alicia Silverstone Posts Video Of Her Pre-Chewing Food For Her Toddler, CBS Local: New York, March 28, 2012 
  43. Strobel, Mike (March 29, 2012), "Pre-chewing child's food not such a clueless idea", The Kingston Whig Standard 
  44. Ryan, Denise (Mar 31, 2012), "Pre-chewing baby’s food just fine, experts say", National Post 
  45. Murray, Rheana (April 11, 2012), "Alicia Silverstone defends pre-chewing her baby’s food, says it’s ‘adorable’ when son eats directly from her mouth:Actress fights criticism of controversial feeding technique, premastication", New York Daily News 
  46. Pittinos, Emily (January 30, 2013), "Emily Pittinos: Pre-chewed food for thought", The Michigan Daily 
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.