Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Eat Fish Thrice A Week To Boost Your Unborn's Eyesight, Brain

IANS, 21 Sep, 2018 05:54 PM
    Pregnant women can enhance the development of their unborn child's eyesight and brain function by regularly eating fatty fish during the pregnancy, a new study has found.
     
     
     
    The findings suggested that infants whose mothers ate fish three or more times a week during the last trimester of their pregnancy fared better than those whose mothers ate no fish or only up to two portions per week.
     
     
    "The results of our study suggest that frequent fish consumption by pregnant women is of benefit for their unborn child's development," said lead author Kirsi Laitinen of the University of Turku in Finland.
     
     
    "This may be attributable to long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids within fish, but also due to other nutrients like vitamin D and E, which are also important for development," Laitinen added.
     
     
    For the study, published in the journal Pediatric Research, the research team analysed the results of a small group of mothers and their children drawn from a larger study. 
     
     
    The mothers had to keep a regular food diary during the course of their pregnancy. Fluctuations in their weight before and during pregnancy were taken into account, along with their blood sugar level and blood pressure. 
     
     
    The team recorded the levels of nutritional long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid sources in the mother's diet and blood serum, and the levels in the blood of their children by the age of one month. 
     
     
    Their children were further tested around their second birthday using pattern reversal visual evoked potentials (pVEP). This sensitive and accurate, non-invasive method is used to detect visual functioning and maturational changes occurring within a young child's visual system.
     
     
    "Our study therefore highlights the potential importance of subtle changes in the diet of healthy women with uncompromised pregnancies, beyond prematurity or nutritional deficiencies, in regulating infantile neurodevelopment," Laitinen noted.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Get Busy For More Self-Control

    Get Busy For More Self-Control
    Want to boost your self-control? Start thinking of yourself as a busy person, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, said in a study.

    Get Busy For More Self-Control

    Add Tulasi To Your Diet To Boost Health

    Add Tulasi To Your Diet To Boost Health
    Integrating Tulasi (Ocimum tenuiflorum) to your diet may not only help you look good but can also boost your physical and mental health, says an Ayurveda expert.

    Add Tulasi To Your Diet To Boost Health

    5 Things To Do In Vancouver That Will Make Your Halloween Season Extra Spooky

    5 Things To Do In Vancouver That Will Make Your Halloween Season Extra Spooky
    The air is becoming crisp and the rain is falling but there's another reason Metro Vancouver might feel a little spine-chilling this season. Halloween is approaching and with it comes plenty of scary and supernatural happenings. 

    5 Things To Do In Vancouver That Will Make Your Halloween Season Extra Spooky

    Annual Smile Cookie Fundraiser Returns to Tim Hortons

    Annual Smile Cookie Fundraiser Returns to Tim Hortons

    100% of proceeds from Smile Cookie sales donated to local charities and organizations   ...

    Annual Smile Cookie Fundraiser Returns to Tim Hortons

    How Binge Drinking Affects Male, Female Brains?

    How Binge Drinking Affects Male, Female Brains?
    While binge drinking affects health of both males and females, the effect of gene expression in an area of the brain linked to addiction was found to be different, finds a new study.

    How Binge Drinking Affects Male, Female Brains?

    WATCH: The Garbage Patch In The Pacific Ocean Is Three Times The Size Of France

    WATCH: The Garbage Patch In The Pacific Ocean Is Three Times The Size Of France
    The Great Pacific Garbage Patch – an enormous swatch of trillions of pieces of plastic and trash floating somewhere between California and Hawaii – is already three times the size of France and growing fast, according to a new report published in Scientific Reports.

    WATCH: The Garbage Patch In The Pacific Ocean Is Three Times The Size Of France