Abstract
Early-life environmental factors, such as maternal diet or early-life nutrition, have been described as significant risk factors for anxiety and depression later in life. With the rising intake of fructose since the 1960 s, several adverse effects have been described, but little is known about the impact of early-life high fructose exposure on the risk of developing depression and anxiety later in life. Since animal models provide ways to test this hypothesis longitudinally in an experimental and controlled environment, we performed a systematic review to investigate whether high fructose exposure during early life influences the risk of developing depression or anxiety-like behaviours in animals. We adopted a high-sensitivity strategy to find potential studies. We included 1805 papers for screening, but only found nine eligible studies that tested only high fructose exposure during development, all conducted in rats. Data extraction and analysis revealed that 6 studies found evidence indicating that fructose exposure in early life increases the risk of anxiety or depression. The remaining 3 studies found no altered behavior after fructose exposure. The discrepancies may be caused by multiple factors, such as time of diet exposure, animal strain, behavioural testing differences, and fructose's metabolic influence. Due to weak and contradictory evidence, we could not conclude if early-life fructose exposure influences the risk of anxiety or depression-like behaviors. We propose future directions and suggestions for future studies to strengthen their findings.
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