Nuts during pregnancy linked to asthma
UTRECHT, Netherlands, July 18 (UPI) -- Expectant mothers who
eat nuts or nut products daily during pregnancy increase the risk
their child will develop asthma, Dutch researchers said.
"We were pretty surprised to see the adverse associations
between daily vs. rare nut product consumption during pregnancy and
symptoms of asthma in children, because we haven't seen this in
similar previous studies," lead author Saskia M. Willers of Utrecht
University, the Netherlands, said in a statement.
It is "too early to make recommendations of avoidance," but
"it's important for pregnant women to eat healthily, and what is
true for many foods is that too much is never good."
In a study by the Dutch government, nearly 4,000 expectant
mothers completed a dietary questionnaire that asked how often they
consumed vegetables, fresh fruit, fish, eggs, milk, milk products,
nuts and nut products during the past month. Their children's diets
were also assessed. Asthma and allergy symptoms were assessed yearly
in the children until age 8.
"The only consistent association between the maternal intake
of the investigated food groups during pregnancy and childhood
asthma symptoms until 8 years of age that we found was with nut
products," Willers said.
The study is published in the American Journal of
Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
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