Glitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word Generator

This Blog is started to provide a knowledge in Bioformatics,Biotechnology, Health Care,etc...

Search

Friday, January 25, 2008

Apples and fish protect unborn children

Apples and fish sound an unlikely food combination, even for a pregnant woman, but new evidence suggests they can protect unborn children against allergic diseases.

Researchers found that children whose mothers enjoyed munching apples while pregnant were less likely to have suffered from wheeze or been diagnosed with asthma by the age of five. Similarly, the sons and daughters of mothers who ate fish once or more a week during pregnancy appeared to be protected against the skin allergy eczema. Scientists believe the effects may be due to powerful antioxidants in apples called flavonoids, and omega-3 fatty acids in fish. A range of other foods studied, including vegetables, fruit juice, citrus and kiwi fruit, whole grains, dairy fat and margarine, did not produce the same protective effects. The investigation was conducted at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. Researchers studied 1,212 children born to women who had filled out food questionnaires during their pregnancy. When the children reached the age of five, the team questioned the mothers about their offspring's respiratory symptoms, allergies, and diet. The children were also given lung function and allergy tests.

Children whose mothers ate the most apples were less likely to have experienced wheeze or asthma than those whose mothers had the lowest apple consumption. Mothers who ate fish once or more a week while pregnant had children who were less likely to have had eczema than children of mothers who never ate fish. Previous studies involving the same group showed that taking vitamins E and D and zinc during pregnancy helped reduce a child's risk of wheeze and asthma.

Researcher Saskia Willers, from Utrecht University in the Netherlands, said a mother's pregnancy diet may have more influence on a child's respiratory health than the child's own food consumption - at least until the age of five. She said: "Other studies have looked at individual nutrients' effect on asthma in pregnancy, but our study looked at specific foods during pregnancy and the subsequent development of childhood asthma and allergies, which is quite new.

No comments:

Google

VijaY

VijaY
I Don't Want to Follow ANYONE , But i will learn from EVERYONE
Glitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word GeneratorGlitter Word Generator

Thank You - Welcome Once again

Then, once you make the change in your life, see if it was beneficial. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain!!

Vijayakumar.M

Visitors From Jan 2008