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Pregnant mothers’ diet linked to child obesity

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An expectant mother’s diet during  pregnancy can alter her baby’s DNA in the womb, increasing its risk of  obesity, heart disease and diabetes in later life, an international study has  found.

Researchers said the study provided the first scientific evidence linking  pregnant women’s diet to childhood obesity, with major implications for public  health.

“This a a major breakthrough because for the first time it gives us the  potential to work out the optimal diet a mother should eat,” Professor Peter  Gluckman from Auckland University’s Liggins Institute told AFP.

“That’s likely to vary slightly from mother to mother, but it could be a  major tool in addressing the obesity epidemic.”

The study, conducted by scientists in Britain, New Zealand and Singapore,  showed that what a mother ate during pregnancy could change the function of  her child’s DNA through a process called epigenetic change.

Children with a high degree of epigenetic change were more likely to  develop a metabolism that “lays down more fat” and become obese, researchers  found.

Such children were around three kilograms (6.6 pounds) heavier than their  peers by the time they were aged six to nine, Gluckman said.

“That’s a hell of a lot of extra weight at that age,” he said, adding that  the extra fat was likely to be carried into adulthood, raising the chances of  developing diabetes and heart disease.

The researchers used umbilical cord tissue to measure the rate of  epigenetic change in 300 babies, then examined whether it was linked to the  children’s weight when they were aged six to nine.

“The correlation was very strong, we didn’t believe it at first, so we  replicated it again and again,” Gluckman said.

The study found the effect was not linked to either the mother or the  baby’s weight at birth, meaning a slim woman could deliver a small baby which  still went on to became obese because of changes triggered by diet in the womb.

Gluckman said the rate of epigenetic change was possibly linked to a low  carbohydrate diet in the first three months of pregnancy but it was too early  to draw a definitive conclusion and further studies were needed.    He said one theory was that an embryo fed a diet containing few  carbohydrates — which provide the body with energy — assumed it would be  born into a carbohydrate-poor environment and altered its metabolism  accordingly.

This meant it stored more fat, which could be used as fuel when food was  scarce.

Gluckman said the study, which will be published in the journal Diabetes  next week, confirmed long-held suspicions that poor prenatal nutrition could  have a major impact on adult heath.

This meant health officials battling soaring obesity rates should look at  policies designed to improve the health of expectant mothers, rather than  simply focusing on trying to help overweight adults, he said.

“It provides the most compelling argument yet to give greater weight to  improving maternal and infant health as a means of reducing the burden of  chronic disease.”

Wellington, April 19, 2011 (AFP)

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