NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Cutting carbohydrates in pregnancy may help
babies' livers, protecting them from later diseases such as diabetes, according
to preliminary studies conducted in mice.
A group of investigators based in the UK found that mice fed a diet low in
carbohydrates and high in unsaturated fats during pregnancy tended to have pups
with lower triglyceride levels in the liver. Having too much triglyceride in the
liver can cause a condition called fatty liver, which is linked to diabetes and
other health problems.
Moreover, young mice whose mothers ate low-carb fare while pregnant had
higher levels of proteins that oxidize fatty acids, a process that helps reduce
the amount of fat circulating in the blood. Too much blood fat can increase the
risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes and other ills.
Despite the apparent benefits of a low-carb pregnancy diet in mice, lead
author Dr. Junlong Zhang warned Reuters Health that "it is too early to
recommend a low-carb diet to pregnant women simply based on the results observed
from our study."
The researcher, who is based at the University of Southampton, said the
investigators are studying whether it is safe for women to follow a
low-carbohydrate diet during pregnancy.
Research suggests that a mother's diet in pregnancy can have long-lasting
effects on her children. Given the recent popularity of low-carbohydrate diets,
the researchers decided to investigate how these diets might impact a developing
fetus.
Zhang and colleagues fed pregnant mice a standard diet or a low-carb diet, in
which approximately 17 percent of calories came from carbohydrates, 27 percent
from protein, and 53 percent from fat.
The investigators found that female mice whose mothers received the low-carb
diet had half the concentration of liver triglycerides seen in other mice, and
significantly more proteins that oxidize fatty acids.
Male mice also appeared to have lower liver triglycerides if their mothers
ate low-carb foods during pregnancy, but the evidence was not strong enough to
determine whether the trend was due to chance, the authors report in the
American Journal of Physiology -- Regulatory, Integrative, and Comparative
Physiology.
Zhang explained that mice that had mothers on low-carb diets during pregnancy
likely changed their physiology in response to their mothers' diet. When
pregnant mice eat low-carb, high-fat foods, he said, "their babies may adapt to
the type of diet before birth."
Consequently, "these babies were able to cope with a greater amount of fat,
and lower amount of carbs even after they were born and grew up," Zhang said.
SOURCE: American Journal of Physiology - Regulatory, Integrative, and
Comparative Physiology, January 2005