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Kate Keenan, Alison E. Hipwell, Modulation of prenatal stress via docosahexaenoic acid supplementation: implications for child mental health, Nutrition Reviews, Volume 73, Issue 3, March 2015, Pages 166–174, https://doi.org/10.1093/nutrit/nuu020
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Abstract
Pregnant women living in poverty experience chronic and acute stressors that may lead to alterations in circulating glucocorticoids. Experimental evidence from animal models and correlational studies in humans support the hypothesis that prenatal exposure to high levels of glucocorticoids can negatively affect the developing fetus and later emotional and behavioral regulation in the offspring. In this integrative review, recent findings from research in psychiatry, obstetrics, and animal and human experimental studies on the role of docosahexaenoic acid in modulation of the stress response and brain development are discussed. The potential for an emerging field of nutritionally based perinatal preventive interventions for improving offspring mental health is described. Prenatal nutritional interventions may prove to be effective approaches to reducing common childhood mental disorders.
- pregnancy
- stress response
- emotions
- glucocorticoids
- child
- docosahexaenoic acids
- mental health
- animal model
- psychiatry
- fetal development
- obstetrics
- poverty
- prenatal care
- stress
- stressor
- psychiatric disorders of infancy, childhood, and adolescence
- perinatal period
- brain development
- experimental study
- prevention
- offspring