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More sugar during pregnancy linked to poor childhood cognition
Poorer childhood cognition reported particularly in memory and learning when pregnant women consume greater quantities of sugar. Consuming more fruits and less sugar, as well as avoiding diet soda during pregnancy, may have a meaningful impact on child cognitive functioning
Sugar consumption among Americans is above recommended limits, and the Current Dietary Guidelines for Americans emphasize the importance of reducing calories from added sugars. They are incorporated into foods and beverages during preparation or processing, with sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) being the greatest contributor to Americans' diets.
Juliana F.W. Cohen and colleagues conducted a study to examine associations of pregnancy and offspring sugar consumption (sucrose, fructose) with child cognition.
Investigators collected dietary assessment data for more than 1,000 pregnant women from 1999 to 2002 who participated in Project Viva. Their offspring's diets were assessed in early childhood. Child cognition was assessed in early- and mid-childhood (at approximately age 3 and 7, respectively).
Key findings include:
- Maternal sugar consumption, especially from SSBs, was associated with poorer childhood cognition including non-verbal abilities to solve novel problems and poorer verbal memory.
- Maternal SSB consumption was associated with poorer global intelligence associated with both verbal knowledge and non-verbal skills.
- Maternal diet soda consumption was associated with the poorer fine motor, visual-spatial, and visual motor abilities in early childhood and poorer verbal abilities in mid-childhood.
- Childhood SSB consumption was associated with poorer verbal intelligence at mid-childhood.
- Child consumption of both fructose and fruit in early childhood was associated with higher cognitive scores in several areas and greater receptive vocabulary.
- The fruit was additionally associated with greater visual motor abilities in early childhood and verbal intelligence in mid-childhood.
- Fruit juice intake was not associated with improved cognition, which may suggest the benefits are from other aspects of fruits, such as phytochemicals, and not fructose itself.
"This study provides evidence that there should be no further delays in implementing the new Nutrition Facts label. The new label will provide information on added sugars so that pregnant women and parents can make informed choices regarding added sugars and more easily limit their intake.
This study also provides additional support for keeping federal nutrition programs strong, such as Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) and the National School Lunch Program, because their promotion of diets higher in fruits and lower in added sugars may be associated with improved childhood cognition," commented Dr. Cohen.
The study has been published in American Journal of Preventive Medicine
For further reference log on to:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2018.02.020
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