Scottish Daily Mail

How eating fruit in pregnancy ‘makes your child brighter’

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

WOMEN who eat fruit during pregnancy have cleverer children, a study revealed.

Toddlers whose mothers ate the most fruit, ranging from bananas to berries, scored highest in thinking skills tests.

But the amount of fruit in the youngsters’ diets after birth made no difference to their marks, the researcher­s found.

Child developmen­t experts in Canada tested 808 one-year-olds whose expectant mothers recorded their daily food intake.

For every portion of fruit eaten by the women per day, the children’s memory and learning test results were on average just over 2 per cent better.

Amounts of fibre, calories, omega 3 consumed – and other aspects of their pregnancy diets – made no difference, the study found.

The researcher­s achieved comparable results in a lab test on fruit flies – the more fruit they ate before laying eggs, the better the offspring did in specially adapted tests.

As the results were similar, the experts say other factors such as social class, education or whether the babies were breastfed, for instance could be ruled out. The tests suggest that the ‘cyclic adenylate monophosph­ate pathway’ – responsibl­e for ‘higher order thinking’ in flies and humans – is boosted by fruit eaten during gestation in both women and female flies.

This pathway also regulates the body’s proteins and chemicals, how cells bind together and the function of areas of the brain including the prefrontal cortex.

The university report for the specialist online journal EBioMedici­ne noted: ‘Mothers who ate more fruit during pregnancy had children who did better on developmen­tal testing at 1 year of age. Similarly, fruit flies had improved learning and memory if their parents had more fruit juice in their diet.

‘In both humans and in the flies, there was no improvemen­t in learning when only the babies were fed fruit. The cyclic adenylate monophosph­ate pathway may be a major regulator of this effect.’

The memories of fruit flies were tested by exposing them to two different successive smells ‘repulsive’ to the insects. One of the odours was paired to an electrical shock, while the other was benign.

They were then presented with two tubes – via which they can fly to either the first or second odour. Flies with better memories learn to avoid the smell that leads to a shock. This memory lasts for about a week – or one fifth of an average fruit fly’s lifetime.

Women are also recommende­d to eat fish and foods high in vitamin D during pregnancy. A study from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York found that eating foods rich in the vitamin reduces the risk of asthma by 20 per cent.

Vitamin D is commonly known as the ‘sunshine vitamin’ – as humans are exposed to high levels of it from the sun’s rays.

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