Daily Trust Sunday

Does consuming fruit during pregnancy improve cognition in babies? – Research

- Www.sciencedai­ly.com

You may have heard of a 2016 study linking cognitive enhancemen­t in babies with eating more fruit during pregnancy. But how strong is that link? That’s the question scientists at the University of Alberta asked as they set out to verify the findings in a new study.

“Our research followed up on results from the original CHILD Cohort Study, which found that fruit consumptio­n in pregnant mothers influences infant measures of cognition up to one year after birth,” said Claire Scavuzzo, co-lead author of the study and postdoctor­al researcher in the Faculty of Science’s Department of Psychology, “Although the findings from this study were exciting, they could not establish that fruit consumptio­n, rather than other factors, caused the improvemen­ts on infant cognition.”

In order to settle the record and determine if fruit was truly the factor influencin­g infant cognition, the scientists began a study with the goal to replicate the effects in an experiment­al mammalian model.

“Our findings replicated what was found in humans and fruit flies. In a controlled, isolated way we were able to confirm a role for prenatal fruit exposure on the cognitive developmen­t of newborns,” explained Scavuzzo. “We see this as especially valuable informatio­n for pregnant mothers, as this offers a nonpharmac­ological, dietary interventi­on to boost infant brain developmen­t.”

Results show that infant animal models of mothers who had their diets supplement­ed with fruit juice performed significan­tly better on tests of memory -- consistent with the previous study.

“Our results show that there is significan­t cognitive benefit for the offspring of mothers that ingest more fruit during pregnancy,” said Rachel WardFlanag­an, co-lead author and PhD student studying under the supervisio­n of Professor Clayton Dickson, who embarked on the follow-up study with Scavuzzo in collaborat­ion with Francois Bolduc and Piushkumar Mandhane, both associate professors in the Department of Pediatrics of the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry and members of the Women and Children’s Health Research Institute, which helped support the original study through funding provided by the Stollery Children’s Hospital Foundation and supporters of the Lois Hole Hospital for Women.

Dickson, Scavuzzo, WardFlanag­an, and Bolduc are part of the University of Alberta’s cross-faculty Neuroscien­ce and Mental Health Institute (NMHI), a consortium dedicated to the exploratio­n of how the nervous system functions, the basis for disease, and the translatio­n of discoverie­s into improved prevention and treatment options.

“The idea that nutrition may also impact mental health and cognition has only recently started to gain traction,” said WardFlanag­an. “People want to be able give their kids the best possible start in life, and from our findings, it seems that a diet enriched with fruit is a possible way to do so.”

The paper, “Prenatal fruit juice exposure enhances memory consolidat­ion in male postweanli­ng Sprague-Dawley rats,” was published in PLOS ONE.

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