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Beware Mothers-to-be! DHA Supplements May Not Do Your Fetus Any Good

by Julia Samuel on March 22, 2017 at 3:52 PM
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Highlights

Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is known to improve memory and brain function and is often supplemented for improved cognition.


It is also given to pregnant mothers to enhance the brain development. But a longer-term follow-up of a randomized trial found strong evidence pointed to the lack of benefit of prenatal DHA supplementation on the IQ of children who are 7 years of age, according to a study published by JAMA.

‘Daily supplementation of 800 mg of DHA during the last half of pregnancy showed no difference in the Intelligent Quotient (IQ) of children, when compared with kids of mothers who were not exposed to the supplement.’

The sale of prenatal supplements with docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) continues to increase despite little evidence of benefit to offspring neurodevelopment.

Effect of DHA Supplements in Children

Maria Makrides, B.Sc., B.N.D., Ph.D., of the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, Australia and colleagues randomized pregnant women to receive 800 mg of DHA daily or a placebo during the last half of pregnancy.

Of those eligible, 543 children (85 percent) participated in the 7-year follow-up. Average IQ of the DHA and control groups did not differ (98.31 for the DHA group vs 97.32 for the control group).

This follow-up was designed to evaluate the effect of prenatal DHA on intelligence quotient (IQ) at 7 years, the earliest age at which adult performance can be indicated.

Although perceptual reasoning was slightly higher in the DHA group, parent-reported behavioral problems and executive dysfunction were worse with prenatal DHA supplementation.

The authors note that the small but consistent negative effects of prenatal DHA on behavior and executive functioning at 7 and 4 years may reflect true effects, although effect sizes were small and neurodevelopmental diagnoses did not differ between groups.

A Note on DHA



Reference

  1. Jacqueline F. Gould et al., Seven-Year Follow-up of Children Born to Women in a Randomized Trial of Prenatal DHA Supplementation, JAMA (2017) http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/10.1001/jama.2016.21303.


Source: Medindia

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