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    Home»Health»Vitamin D Levels During Pregnancy Linked With Child IQ – Significantly Lower Levels Identified in Black Women
    Health

    Vitamin D Levels During Pregnancy Linked With Child IQ – Significantly Lower Levels Identified in Black Women

    By Seattle Children's Research InstituteNovember 7, 20202 Comments5 Mins Read
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    Pregnant Woman
    Vitamin D is a critical nutrient and has many important functions in the body. Credit: Seattle Children’s

    Vitamin D is a critical nutrient and has many important functions in the body. A mother’s vitamin D supply is passed to her baby in utero and helps regulate processes including brain development. A study published on November 2, 2020, in The Journal of Nutrition showed that mothers’ vitamin D levels during pregnancy were associated with their children’s IQ, suggesting that higher vitamin D levels in pregnancy may lead to greater childhood IQ scores. The study also identified significantly lower levels of vitamin D levels among Black pregnant women.

    Melissa Melough, the lead author of the study and research scientist in the Department of Child Health, Behavior, and Development at Seattle Children’s Research Institute, says vitamin D deficiency is common among the general population as well as pregnant women, but notes that Black women are at greater risk. Melough says she hopes the study will help health care providers address disparities among women of color and those who are at higher risk for vitamin D deficiency.

    “Melanin pigment protects the skin against sun damage, but by blocking UV rays, melanin also reduces vitamin D production in the skin. Because of this, we weren’t surprised to see high rates of vitamin D deficiency among Black pregnant women in our study. Even though many pregnant women take a prenatal vitamin, this may not correct an existing vitamin D deficiency,” Melough said. “I hope our work brings greater awareness to this problem, shows the long-lasting implications of prenatal vitamin D for the child and their neurocognitive development, and highlights that there are certain groups providers should be paying closer attention to. Wide-spread testing of vitamin D levels is not generally recommended, but I think health care providers should be looking out for those who are at higher risk, including Black women.”

    Addressing disparities

    According to Melough, as many as 80% of Black pregnant women in the U.S. may be deficient in vitamin D. Of the women who participated in the study, approximately 46% of the mothers were deficient in vitamin D during their pregnancy, and vitamin D levels were lower among Black women compared to White women.

    Melough and her co-authors used data from a cohort in Tennessee called the Conditions Affecting Neurocognitive Development and Learning in Early Childhood (CANDLE) study. CANDLE researchers recruited pregnant women to join the study starting in 2006 and collected information over time about their children’s health and development.

    After controlling for several other factors related to IQ, higher vitamin D levels in pregnancy were associated with higher IQ in children ages 4 to 6 years old. Although observational studies like this one cannot prove causation, Melough believes her findings have important implications and warrant further research.

    Vitamin D deficiency

    “Vitamin D deficiency is quite prevalent,” Melough said. “The good news is there is a relatively easy solution. It can be difficult to get adequate vitamin D through diet, and not everyone can make up for this gap through sun exposure, so a good solution is to take a supplement.”

    The recommended daily intake of vitamin D is 600 international units (IU). On average, Americans consume less than 200 IU in their diet, and so if people aren’t making up that gap through sun exposure or supplementation, Melough says people will probably become deficient. Foods that contain higher levels of vitamin D include fatty fish, eggs, and fortified sources like cow’s milk and breakfast cereals. However, Melough notes that vitamin D is one of the most difficult nutrients to get in adequate amounts from our diets.

    Additional research is needed to determine the optimal levels of vitamin D in pregnancy, but Melough hopes this study will help to develop nutritional recommendations for pregnant women. Especially among Black women and those at high risk for vitamin D deficiency, nutritional supplementation and screening may be an impactful strategy for reducing health disparities.

    Key takeaways

    Melough says there are three key takeaways from the study:

    1. Vitamin D deficiency is common during pregnancy, and Black women are at greater risk because melanin pigment in the skin reduces production of vitamin D
    2. Higher vitamin D levels among mothers during pregnancy may promote brain development and lead to higher childhood IQ scores
    3. Screening and nutritional supplementation may correct vitamin D deficiency for those at high risk and promote cognitive function in offspring

    “I want people to know that it’s a common problem and can affect children’s development,” Melough said. “Vitamin D deficiency can occur even if you eat a healthy diet. Sometimes it’s related to our lifestyles, skin pigmentation, or other factors outside of our control.”

    Reference: “Maternal Plasma 25-Hydroxyvitamin D during Gestation Is Positively Associated with Neurocognitive Development in Offspring at Age 4–6 Years” by Melissa M Melough, Laura E Murphy, J Carolyn Graff, Karen J Derefinko, Kaja Z LeWinn, Nicole R Bush, Daniel A Enquobahrie, Christine T Loftus, Mehmet Kocak, Sheela Sathyanarayana and Frances A Tylavsky, 2 November 2020, The Journal of Nutrition.
    DOI: 10.1093/jn/nxaa309

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    2 Comments

    1. Christine Feinthel on December 14, 2020 12:16 pm

      As a bus driver for RideOn, we were not able to wear to the knee city shorts, even though police were allowed in same jurisdiction. Many bus drivers are black women
      Skirts were allowed, which I wore, but not practical for all the work up and down, a driver does in a bus.
      Also, young people more likely to drink soda than milk, which is D fortified

      Reply
    2. Musa I on December 14, 2020 11:14 pm

      This research should not have been published in the first place before the more research being asked to be done on the effects of vit–D had been conducted. The IQ for blacks maybe low but what are the effects of vit–D on the high intelligence of blacks?

      Reply
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