Yorkshire Post

Multivitam­ins ‘may reduce risk of autism’

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TAKING MULTIVITAM­INS in early pregnancy may reduce the risk of children developing autism, research suggests.

Experts found that children whose mothers had taken the vitamins were around half as likely to develop autism as those whose mothers took none. But the team cautioned that although they had found a possible associatio­n, more research was needed. Writing in the

l( experts from universiti­es and hospitals in Philadelph­ia, Stockholm and Bristol, examined data for 273,107 mothers and their children living in Stockholm. All the children were aged four to 15 by December 31 2011, and were born between 1996 and 2007. The woman’s use of folic acid, iron, and multivitam­in supplement­s had been recorded at their first antenatal visit.

Cases of autism spectrum disorder were also identified in national registers. After adjusting for factors that might influence the findings, experts found that women who took multivitam­ins, with or without additional iron and/or folic acid, had a lower chance of their child developing autism with intellectu­al disability compared to mothers who took none.

When iron and folic acid were looked at alone, there was no consistent evidence that their use was associated with a reduced risk of autism.

NHS guidelines say a healthy diet should give women most of the vitamins and minerals they need in pregnancy. But women should also take 400 micrograms of folic acid a day for the first 12 weeks of pregnancy and 10 micrograms of vitamin D a day, they say. More than one in 100 people are on the autism spectrum, including an estimated 700,000 people in the UK.

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