Tuesday, April 29, 2014

What a woman eats BEFORE she becomes pregnant affects her child's health for life

  • Mother’s nutrition before she becomes pregnant is 'super-critical'
  • Nutrients needed to make chemical changes that affect DNA include vitamins B2, B6 and B12, plus choline - found in eggs - and folic acid
  • Findings could lead to cocktail of vitamins being taken before pregnancy




  • It’s often said you are what you eat.
    But it seems that what your mother ate is also important.
    Research points to a woman’s diet before she becomes pregnant affecting the genes of her future child.
    Preparation: A woman's diet before she becomes pregnant affects the genes of her future child, new research suggests
    Preparation: A woman's diet before she becomes pregnant affects the genes of her future child, new research suggests

    What is more, pre-conception diet may have a life-long impact on the as yet unborn child’s health.
    Researcher Andrew Prentice, of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said: ‘The key message is that a mother’s nutrition before she becomes pregnant is super-critical.
    ‘There is a lot going on before the moment of conception.’
    The science is still in its infancy, but it could lead to women who want to start a family being advised to take a cocktail of vitamins and other food supplements ahead of pregnancy.
     

    To pin down the effect of a mother’s diet on health, Professor Prentice studied women in rural West Africa, where the marked seasons lead to distinct changes in the foods eaten.
    Working with colleagues from the Medical Research Council’s unit in the Gambia, he measured the concentration of various nutrients in the blood of nearly 170 newly-pregnant women.
    Half had conceived at the height of the rainy season and half had become pregnant at the peak of the dry season.
    Good sources of the nutrients needed to make chemical changes include green leafy vegetables
    Stocking up: Good sources of the nutrients needed to make chemical changes include milk, green leafy vegetables and protein

    He also scrutinised the DNA of their babies after they were born and quizzed other local women about their diet through the seasons.
    Crunching the results together showed a clear link between a woman’s diet and her child’s genes.
    Crucially, it was what she ate before pregnancy that was important – not what eaten when carrying the child.
    The difference involved ‘epigenetic’ changes to the baby’s DNA.  These aren’t mutations but chemical changes that affect when genes become active and how active they are.
    Not all of our genes are active all of the time, and if they are under or over-active, it can cause problems.
    Building blocks: Choline, found in eggs, in another influential nutrient, the study found
    Building blocks: Choline, found in eggs, in another influential nutrient, the study found

    It is not known if the changes found here affect health but, in other work, Professor Prentice has found linked pre-pregnancy diet to the chemistry of genes involved in obesity, cancer and the immune system.
    Some changes can be erased over time, others are life-long.
    Nutrients needed to make the chemical changes include vitamins B2, B6 and B12, as well as choline and methionine and folic acid.
    Professor Prentice said that while it is too early to give advice, good sources of these compounds include, milk, green, leafy vegetables and protein.
    Women are already advised to take folic acid, or vitamin B9 in the run-up to pregnancy.

    The professor said: ‘Now research is pointing to the need for a cocktail of nutrients, which could come from the diet or from supplements.
    ‘What is pretty thrilling is that we seem to have hit on something that has worldwide consequences for women trying to conceive.’
    Variations: The diet differences involved 'epigenetic' changes to the baby's DNA (pictured). These are chemical changes that affect when genes become active and how active they are
    Variations: The diet differences involved 'epigenetic' changes to the baby's DNA (pictured). These are chemical changes that affect when genes become active and how active they are
    Almost ten years ago, scientists showed the nutrients in a mouse’s diet before pregnancy can alter the colour of the coat of her future pup.
    The latest research, published in the journal Nature Communications, is the first to definitively link preconception diet with epigenetic changes in people.
    It is part of a growing body of research that points to a child’s health being programmed early in life – including in the womb and even before conception.
    It is argued that these early days shape a child’s chances of everything from developing diabetes in their 40s and 50s to having a heart attack in old age.
    It is even said that life expectancy can be traced back to those early days and months, as can a lifelong battle of the bulge.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2615985/What-woman-eats-BEFORE-pregnant-affects-childs-health-life-Milk-green-veg-protein-effect-genes.html#ixzz30Iar4DGQ 
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