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Obesity in pregnant women could affect baby’s brain development, study finds

Pregnant Woman with a Doctor Photo: Getty Images

*Findings affirm that a mother’s obesity may play a role in fetal brain development ─Researchers

Isola Moses | ConsumerConnect

Current studies have emphasised how mothers’ habits can have an effect on their children, as women who follow healthy lifestyles are more likely to have kids who reap the benefits of such choices.

Researchers from New York University (NYU) Langone Health have found that pregnant women’s body mass indices (BMIs) could have an effect on their babies’ brain development, says report.

Researcher Mariah Thompson, PhD said: “Our findings affirm that a mother’s obesity may play a role in fetal brain development, which might explain some of the cognitive and metabolic health concerns seen in children born to mothers with higher BMI.”

In understanding brain development, the researchers noted that to better comprehend the link between pregnant women’s weight and newborns’ brain development, the they analysed over 100 pregnant women and their children.

All of the women were between six and nine months pregnant and had BMIs that ranged between “overweight” and “obese” on the BMI scale.

For the study, the scientists took brain scans of the babies before they were born and sought to discover what, if any, effect mothers’ weight had on development.

Though the women were between their second and third trimesters during the study, the images showed nearly 200 different active nerve cells in the babies’ brains, report said.

According to the findings, ultimately, the researchers identified two parts of the brain that were affected by a mother’s weight ─ the anterior insula and prefrontal cortex. While the former deals with emotional responses, the latter can affect anything from speech to reasoning skills. The team warned that development issues in these areas of the brain could lead to conditions like autism or ADHD.

Though the researchers were able to make this association between obesity in pregnant women and fetal brain development, they caution that these findings can’t indicate whether these effects will last long-term or what they’ll mean for newborns as they develop into children and adolescents.

They plan to do more work in this area to gain a deeper understanding of how kids’ development and health could be affected by their mothers’ BMI, added the report.

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