已往的研究已经证实,虽然孕妇增补叶酸有利于预防胎儿在发现过程中出现神经管缺陷和脑部畸形等,但对其它出生缺陷(如兔唇或腭裂)则少有预防作用。最近,美国斯坦福大学的研究人员证实“孕妇在过程中坚持采纳平衡膳食,特别是多食水果与蔬菜、粗粮,外加叶酸等维生素增补品,可以显著降低胎儿的大多数出生缺陷(包括神经管畸形、兔唇和腭裂等)之风险”。更多资讯,请参阅原文!
Mom's Healthy Diet Might Cut Birth
Defect Risk
Prevention involves overall eating, not just supplements,
experts say
MONDAY, Oct. 3 (HealthDay News) -- Pregnant women who eat a
healthy diet appear to reduce the risk of having a baby with a
major birth defect, such as spina bifida or a cleft lip or palette,
a new study suggests.
Neural
tube birth defects -- including spina bifida and other brain
abnormalities -- are known to decrease when pregnant women take
supplements of folic acid, a type of vitamin B that also has been
added to a variety of foods. However, folic acid alone does not
prevent all birth defects, the researchers said.
"There
may be certain qualities of foods that have benefits that aren't
captured by examining just one nutrient at a time," said lead
researcher Suzan L. Carmichael, an associate professor of
pediatrics at Stanford University.
Diet
could also be related to reducing birth defects because a
combination of nutrients from a variety of foods may act together
in a beneficial way, Carmichael said. "It is also possible that a
healthy diet is a marker for other characteristics of a woman's
lifestyle.
"Our
study supports recommendations that have been made for many years
for pregnant women," she said. "Eat a variety of foods, include a
lot of fruits and vegetables and whole grains in your diet and take
a vitamin supplement that contains folic acid."
Although
folic acid can prevent up to 40 percent of neural tube defects,
it's not the whole story, Carmichael said. "Babies are still born
with neural tube defects, so we need to keep looking for answers,"
she said.
The
report was published in the Oct. 3 online edition of the
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent
Medicine.
Using
data from the U.S. National Birth Defects Prevention Study for
October 1997 through December 2005, Carmichael's team looked at the
role diet plays in birth defects. During telephone interviews,
mothers described their diet.
The
researchers looked at cases of 936 infants born with neural tube
defects, 2,475 with oral clefts, and compared these with 6,147
infants without birth defects.
They
found that women with diets similar to the Mediterranean Diet --
which is rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains and fish and
light in fats and sugar -- or the Food Guide Pyramid of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture were at lower risk of having a baby with
a neural tube defect or oral cleft, compared to women who reported
eating less-healthy diets.
This
finding remained even after adjusting for other factors such as
taking a vitamin or mineral supplement, the researchers noted. "We
found that diet was important whether a women took a vitamin
supplement or not," Carmichael said.
Most
women who gave birth to an infant who did not have a birth defect
were white and had more than a high school education, the
researchers found. Among mothers in the survey, 19 percent smoked,
38 percent drank, 78 percent took folic acid supplements and 16
percent were obese.
David R.
Jacobs, Jr., the Mayo Professor of Public Health at the University
of Minnesota in Minneapolis, and co-author of an accompanying
journal editorial, said, "We have confused the constituents of food
with food itself. Food is a complex mixture."
There may
be a number of right ways to eat, and some diets that are not so
good, he said. Generally, foods are better than supplements except
when there is a deficiency, he added.
Jacobs
noted that foods are more complex than drugs that contain only a
single element and have been tested. "Food are not well
understood," he said.
"There
are some better ways to eat and supplements are probably not the
right answer -- we should eat food," Jacobs said. One should not
eat too much and eat mostly plants, he added.
Commenting on the study, Gail Harrison, a professor of public
health at the University of California, Los Angeles, and
spokeswoman for the March of Dimes, said, "I am not surprised that
there is an independent effect of total diet quality."
The
finding underscores the importance of the mother's nutrition both
before and during pregnancy and the effect it can have on the
developing infant, she said. "A lot that goes on that determines
pregnancy outcome goes on very early in the pregnancy -- before
women even realize they're pregnant," she said.
Harrison
noted that healthy eating needs to start even before pregnancy.
"Women who are capable of becoming pregnant really need to pay
attention to overall diet quality," she said.
SOURCES: Suzan L.
Carmichael, Ph.D., associate professor of pediatrics, Stanford
University, Stanford, Calif.; David R. Jacobs, Jr., Ph.D., Mayo
Professor of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis;
Gail Harrison, Ph.D., professor of public health, University of
California, Los Angeles, spokeswoman, March of Dimes; Oct. 3, 2011,
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent
Medicine, online
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