Fish oil supplements given to pregnant women improved the hand-eye coordination of toddlers.
Archives of Disease in Childhood recently published a study which proves that fish oil supplements given to pregnant women improved the hand-eye coordination of toddlers.
The trial was done on 98 women who were put on 4 g of fish oil/olive oil supplements from 20th week of their pregnancy till the birth of their child.Only non-smokers and those who did not routinely eat more than two weekly portions of fish were included in the study. Eighty three mothers completed the study.
Once the children had reached two and a half years of age, they were assessed using validated tests to measure growth and development.
These included tests of language, behavior, practical reasoning and hand-eye coordination. In all, 72 children were assessed (33 in the fish oil group and 39 in the olive oil group).
There were no significant overall differences in language skills and growth between the two groups of children.
But those whose mothers had taken fish oil supplements scored more highly on measures of receptive language (comprehension), average phrase length, and vocabulary.
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This finding held true even after taking into account other potentially influential factors, such as the mother's age and duration of breast feeding.
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Prompted by concerns about mercury content in certain types of fish, pharmaceutical grade fish oil supplements are becoming increasingly popular, say the authors.
The findings show that relatively high doses of omega 3 rich fish oil supplements in the second half of pregnancy do not seem to have any adverse effects on neurodevelopment or growth, they add.
Source-Eurekalert
KOM