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Could omega-3 fatty acids in pregnancy help prevent miscarriages?

Columbia University Irving Medical Center

pregnancy

Compounds found in fish oil prevent pregnancy complications, including preterm birth, neonatal death, and stillbirth, in mice when the complications are caused by a common oral bacteria, according to new research.

FAB RESEARCH COMMENT:

Controlled clinical trials have already shown that supplementation with the long-chain omega-3 found in fish oils - particularly DHA - reduce rates of pre-term birth and other pregnancy complications in humans. See:


This new study - in mice - investigated one possible common cause of pregnancy complications.

First, the researchers showed that a common type of oral bacteria can trigger inflammation is it spreads elsewhere in the body - including the placenta - and that the resulting inflammation can cause serious pregnancy complications, including miscarriage or stillbirth.

They then showed that high-dose omega-3 supplementation can counteract these risks.

The authors emphasise that the omega-3 doses used in this study were higher than those recommended for women during pregnancy via fish oils (or other supplement sources of DHA), so the findings have no immediate clinical implications.

They do, however, open up new avenues of research that could lead to better ways of managing maternal infections in future to improve pregnancy outcomes.


Read the underlying research here:


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And for more information on this subject, see:

7 February 2019 - MedicalXpress

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Compounds found in fish oil prevent pregnancy complications, including preterm birth, neonatal death, and stillbirth, in mice when the complications are caused by a common oral bacteria, according to research published today in the journal JCI Insight.

The study, by scientists at Columbia University's College of Dental Medicine and Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons, suggests a new strategy for protecting pregnancy in women.

Approximately one in 10 U.S. infants are born before term. Between 10 and 30 percent of preterm births have been attributed to uterine infections with a type of bacteria commonly found in the mouth, F. nucleatum.

This research identifies a potential prophylactic treatment for pregnant women to lower the risk of adverse outcomes including stillbirth.

"This type of bacteria is ubiquitous; everybody has it in their mouths," says Yiping Han, Ph.D., senior author of the new study. "The problems start when it travels to other parts of the body."

In pregnant women, the placenta is at particular risk for infection with F. nucleatum. Hormonal changes during pregnancy can cause inflammation and bleeding in the gums, which affects between 30 and 100 percent of pregnant women.

Bleeding gums create an entryway for bacteria to leak into the bloodstream. Once in the circulatory system, the bacteria can migrate to the placenta and cause inflammation there, sometimes triggering miscarriage or stillbirth.

Isolating the inflammatory mechanism

"We knew from our previous work that uterine inflammation due to infection with this bacteria is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes, but in order to prevent those outcomes, we needed to determine exactly how these infections trigger inflammation."

Using a mouse model, the researchers injected the bacteria into mice during their third trimester of pregnancy. As predicted, the bacteria invaded the animals' uteruses.

The researchers saw that the bacteria triggered an inflammatory response in endothelial cells within the mouse placenta, leading to preterm births.

The inflammatory response only occurred when a specific immune protein was present in the mothers' endothelial cells. In pregnant mice lacking this protein, fewer fetuses died, suggesting that inflammation ignited by this protein is critical for causing preterm births.

Omega-3's prevent inflammation, improve birth outcomes in mice

After determining how the bacteria trigger inflammation within the placenta, Han's team used cultured cells to look for ways to inhibit those mechanisms.

"We were looking for an anti-inflammatory agent that's safe for pregnant women to use," says Han.

Because omega-3 fatty acid supplements are widely used to reduce inflammation in chronic inflammatory diseases, such as heart disease and rheumatoid arthritis, Dr. Han considered fish oil, which is rich in omega-3 fatty acids.

These supplements are already recommended for pregnant women to support fetal development.

The experiments showed that supplements containing omega-3 fatty acids also inhibited inflammation and bacterial growth in pregnant mice, and reduced preterm births, miscarriages, and stillbirths.

Han now hopes to begin a clinical trial to test whether omega-3 fatty acids can prevent intrauterine F. nucleatum infection and adverse outcomes in pregnant women.

Caveats

The doses of omega-3 fatty acids used in this study were far higher than those recommended for people taking fish oil supplements. The study points to a promising avenue for further research, but does not support any immediate changes in clinical practice.

The study is titled "Omega-3 fatty acids suppress Fusobacterium nucleatum-induced placental inflammation originating from maternal endothelial cells" appeared online Feb. 7, 2019 in the journal JCI Insight.