Previous research has linked one pollutant in fish – mercury – to
damage of the nervous, digestive and immune systems, lungs, kidneys,
skin and eyes. Because of this, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration and Environmental Protection Agency encourage
pregnant women to limit consumption to no more than three servings a
week.
The current study points to another risk for pregnant women to
consider – the potential for pollutants in fish to contribute to
childhood obesity by interfering with hormone system development
while babies are in the womb, researchers report in JAMA Pediatrics.
Women shouldn’t avoid fish altogether, because it’s a rich source of
important nutrients like protein, vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids
– but they shouldn’t overindulge, said lead study author Dr. Leda
Chatzi of the University of Crete in Greece.
“Our findings indicate that women should adhere to current fish
consumption guidelines,” Chatzi said by email.
“In general, women should eat a variety of types of fish each week
and avoid consumption of large predatory fish such as king mackerel,
swordfish, shark and tilefish,” Chatzi added, identifying some
varieties that may contain more pollutants.
To assess the connection between maternal fish consumption and
childhood obesity, Chatzi and colleagues analyzed data from 15
previously published studies that tracked more than 26,000 pregnant
women and their children at two-year intervals until the kids
reached age six.
The combined study population included babies delivered from 1996 to
2011 in Belgium, France, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway,
Poland, Portugal, Spain and the U.S. state of Massachusetts.
Fish intake varied by region. In Belgium, for example, only half of
the pregnant women ate fish more often than once every two weeks.
But in Spain, by contrast, half the women were eating fish more than
four times a week.
With moderate fish consumption – one to three times a week –
researchers didn’t find any association with rapid infant growth or
childhood obesity up to age six.
But compared to women who rarely at fish while pregnant, women who
ate fish more frequently during pregnancy had a 22 percent increased
risk that children would experience unusually rapid growth from
birth to age two, the study found.
At the same time, women who consumed lots of fish had kids who were
14 percent more likely to be overweight or obese by age four and 22
percent more likely to carry excess pounds by age six.
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The effect of heavy fish consumption was more pronounced in girls
than boys.
Researchers calculated these risks based on estimated growth
trajectories across all of the studies.
One limitation of the analysis is that it relied on women to report
what they ate, and they might not have been accurate, the authors
note. The study also can’t prove whether consuming lots of fish
during pregnancy actually causes children to become obese, only that
there’s an association between these two things.
The findings are also a bit counterintuitive because some previous
research suggests omega-3 fatty acids in fish can protect against
obesity, noted Dr. Emily Oken, a nutrition and public health
researcher at Harvard University who wasn’t involved in the study.
Mercury in fish isn’t linked to obesity, even though it’s tied to
other developmental problems, but it’s possible pesticides or other
contaminants in fish might contribute to weight gain in children,
Oken said.
“It is also possible that eating more fish in pregnancy is just a
marker for eating more, and we know that women who gain more weight
during pregnancy also have children at higher risk for being
overweight,” Oken added.
But women who eat fish in moderation shouldn’t panic.
“I don’t like to use the word `dangerous’ because that may well
scare women from eating fish, which are a good part of a healthy
diet,” Oken said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1WnuEyA JAMA Pediatrics, online February 15,
2016.
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