MONDAY, May 21 (HealthDay News) -- Filling up on apples and fish
during
Researchers from the Netherlands and Scotland have found that
eating apples throughout pregnancy may protect against
"To our knowledge, we are one of the first studies evaluating the influence of maternal consumption of so many different foods and food groups during pregnancy on childhood asthma and allergic disease," said study author Saskia Willers, a doctoral student at Utrecht University in the Netherlands.
Previous studies in the same group of children, part of the
SEATON birth cohort conducted at the University of Aberdeen in
Scotland, found that maternal intake of
The researchers studied 1,212 children born to women who had
filled out food questionnaires 32 weeks into their pregnancy. When
the children were 5, the mothers filled out another questionnaire
about their child's
The study found that children of women who ate more apples and fish during their pregnancy were less likely to develop asthma or allergic disease. Specifically, children of women who ate fish once or more a week were 43 percent less likely to have had eczema at age 5 than children of mothers who never ate fish. Those whose mothers ate more than four apples a week during pregnancy were 37 percent less likely to have ever wheezed, 46 percent less likely to have had asthma symptoms, and 53 percent less likely to have had doctor-confirmed asthma compared to children of mothers who ate one or no apples a week.


















