Login / Signup

Maternal fish consumption and child neurodevelopment in Nutrition 1 Cohort: Seychelles Child Development Study.

Marie Catherine ConwayAlison J YeatesTanzy M LoveDaniel WellerEmeir Mary McSorleyMaria S MulhernMaria WesolowskaGene E WatsonGary J MyersConrad F ShamlayeJuliette HendersonPhilip W DavidsonEdwin van WijngaardenJ J Strain
Published in: The British journal of nutrition (2023)
Maternal fish consumption exposes the foetus to beneficial nutrients and potentially adverse neurotoxicants. The current study investigated associations between maternal fish consumption and child neurodevelopmental outcomes. Maternal fish consumption was assessed in the Seychelles Child Development Study Nutrition Cohort 1 (NC1) ( n =229) using four-day food diaries. Neurodevelopment was evaluated at nine and 30 months, and five and nine years with test batteries assessing 26 endpoints and covering multiple neurodevelopmental domains. Analyses used multiple linear regression with adjustment for covariates known to influence child neurodevelopment. This cohort consumed an average of 8 fish meals per week and the total fish intake during pregnancy was 106.8 (SD 61.9) g/d. Among the 26 endpoints evaluated in the primary analysis there was one beneficial association. Children whose mothers consumed larger quantities of fish performed marginally better on the KBIT (a test of nonverbal intelligence) at age 5 years (β 0.003, 95% CI 0 - 0.005). A secondary analysis dividing fish consumption into tertiles found no significant associations when comparing the highest and lowest consumption groups. In this cohort, where fish consumption is substantially higher than current global recommendations, maternal fish consumption during pregnancy was not beneficially or adversely associated with children's neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Keyphrases