Food and Behaviour Research

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Maternal and early postnatal nutrition and mental health of offspring by age 5 years: a prospective cohort study

Jacka FN, Ystrom E, Brantsaeter AL, Karevold E, Roth C, Haugen M, Meltzer HM, Schjolberg S, Berk M. (2013) J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2013  52(10): 1038-47. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2013.07.002. Epub 2013 Aug 17. 

Web URL: View this and related abstracts via PubMed here

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE:

Diet quality is related to the risk for depression and anxiety in adults and adolescents; however, the possible impact of maternal and early postnatal nutritional exposures on children's subsequent mental health is unexplored.

METHOD:

The large prospective Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study recruited pregnant women between 1999 and 2008. Data were collected from mothers during pregnancy and when children were 6 months and 1.5, 3, and 5 years of age. Latent growth curve models were used to model linear development in children's internalizing and externalizing problems from 1.5 to 5 years of age as a function of diet quality during pregnancy and at 1.5 and 3 years. Diet quality was evaluated by dietary pattern extraction and characterized as "healthy" or "unhealthy." The sample comprised 23,020 eligible women and their children. Adjustments were made for variables including sex of the child, maternal depression, maternal and paternal age, maternal educational attainment, household income, maternal smoking before and during pregnancy, mothers' parental locus of control, and marital status.

RESULTS:

Higher intakes of unhealthy foods during pregnancy predicted externalizing problems among children, independently of other potential confounding factors and childhood diet. Children with a high level of unhealthy diet postnatally had higher levels of both internalizing and externalizing problems. Moreover, children with a low level of postnatal healthy diet also had higher levels of both internalizing and externalizing problems.

CONCLUSION:

Among this large cohort of mothers and children, early nutritional exposures were independently related to the risk for behavioral and emotional problems in children.

Copyright © 2013 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

FAB RESEARCH COMMENT:

This prospective population study found significant links between mothers' diets during pregnancy, as well as their children's diets during infancy, and the subsequent mental health and development of the children up to 5 years of age.

Controlling for other factors known to affect child behavioural outcomes, the researchers found that 'unhealthy' maternal diets during pregnancy (broadly, those that were least consisent with healthy eating guidelines) predicted higher risks for both 'internalising' problems like anxiety and depression, and 'externalising' problems such as hyperactivity, impulsivity or challenging behaviours in the resulting children.

Similar associations were found for the children's diets during infancy and their subsequent behaviour.

These data add to the mounting evidence that early life nutrition is an important predictor of children's mental, as well as physical health and development.

While these data were purely observational, and so cannot in themselves address questions of cause and effect, the findings are consistent with evidence from animal studies showing causal effects of unhealthy maternbal diet on behavioural outcomes in the offspring, as well as many potential mechanisms that can explain these links. 


For more information on how prenatal nutrition can influence health and development throughout life - and to stay updated with new findings as these are forthcoming - please bookmark the following lists of articles, which are regularly updated: