Pregnant
women who eat a “prudent” diet rich in vegetables, fruits, whole grains
and who drink water have a significantly reduced risk of preterm
delivery, suggests a study published on nijahotnews.blogspot.com today. A
“traditional” dietary pattern of boiled potatoes, fish and cooked
vegetables was also linked to a significantly lower risk.
Although these findings cannot establish
causality, they support dietary advice to pregnant women to eat a
balanced diet including vegetables, fruit, whole grains, and fish and to
drink water.
Preterm delivery (before 37 weeks of
pregnancy) is associated with significant short and long term ill-health
and accounts for almost 75% of all newborn deaths.
Evidence shows that a mother’s dietary
habits can directly affect her unborn child, so researchers based in
Sweden, Norway and Iceland set out to examine whether a link exists
between maternal diet and preterm delivery.
Using data from the Norwegian Mother and
Child Cohort Study, they analyzed preterm births among 66,000 women
between 2002 and 2008.
To be included, participants had to be
free of diabetes, have delivered a live single baby, and completed a
validated food frequency questionnaire on dietary habits during the
first four to five months of pregnancy.
Factors that may have affected the
results (known as confounding), including a mother’s age, history of
preterm delivery and education were taken into account. Preterm delivery
was defined as delivery between 22 and <37 weeks of pregnancy.
The researchers identified three
distinct dietary patterns, interpreted as “prudent” (vegetables, fruits,
oils, water as a beverage, whole grain cereals, poultry, fibre rich
bread), “Western” (salty and sweet snacks, white bread, desserts,
processed meat products), and “traditional” (potatoes, fish, gravy,
cooked vegetables, low fat milk).
Among the 66,000 pregnant women, preterm delivery occurred in 3,505 (5.3%) cases.
After adjusting for several confounding
factors, the team found that an overall “prudent” dietary pattern was
associated with a significantly reduced risk of preterm delivery,
especially among women having their first baby, as well as spontaneous
and late preterm delivery.
They also found a significantly reduced
risk of preterm delivery for the “traditional” dietary pattern. However,
the “Western” dietary pattern was not independently associated with
preterm delivery.
This indicates that increasing the
intake of foods associated with a prudent dietary pattern is more
important than totally excluding processed food, fast food, junk food,
and snacks, say the authors.
They stress that a direct (causal) link
cannot be drawn from the results, but say the findings suggest that
“diet matters for the risk of preterm delivery, which may reassure
medical practitioners that the current dietary recommendations are sound
but also inspire them to pay more attention to dietary counselling.”
These findings are important, as
prevention of preterm delivery is of major importance in modern
obstetrics. They also indicate that preterm delivery might actually be
modified by maternal diet, they conclude.
In an accompanying editorial, Professor
Lucilla Poston at King’s College London, says healthy eating in
pregnancy is always a good idea.
She points to several studies that have
proposed the benefit of a diet rich in fruit and/or vegetables in
prevention of premature birth, and says health professionals “would
therefore be well advised to reinforce the message that pregnant women
eat a healthy diet.”
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