
LONDON — Children of women who eat a
Mediterranean diet rich in fruits and vegetables while pregnant
are far less likely to develop asthma or allergies later in
life, Greek researchers said on Tuesday.
And eating vegetables more than eight times a
week, fish more than three times a week and legumes more than
once a week seems to boost the protection, the researchers said
in the journal Thorax.
The combination of healthy foods containing a
number of known antioxidants and nutrients likely made the
difference but more study is needed to show exactly how, they
added.
"Further studies are needed to better
understand the mechanisms of this protective effect and the most
relevant window of exposure," Leda Chatzi, a researcher at the
University of Crete, and colleagues wrote.
The findings add further evidence to the
health benefits of a Mediterranean diet that emphasizes
vegetables, fish and healthy fats such as olive and canola oil
over red meat.
The researchers based their findings on 468
pregnant women tracked for six and a half years after giving
birth using questionnaires on diet.
Parents provided details on respiratory and
allergic symptoms of their children, who were also tested for
persistent wheezing and allergies.
Children of mothers who followed a
high-quality Mediterranean diet were 80 percent less likely to
have persistent wheezing, the most common symptom of childhood
asthma, the study found. They were also 45 percent less likely
to develop allergies.
At the same time, children of women who consumed more red
meat seemed to be at higher risk of developing these problems
while the children’s diet when young did not seem to matter, the
researchers said. – Reuters