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Motherhood - Boosting Baby's Brain
Power In Utero
Your Baby Today: Pregnancy: Preparing
for Baby
Boosting Baby's Brain Power in Utero
By Beth Weinhouse for Your
Baby Today The young woman sits
in the chair, reading aloud from The Cat in the Hat.
Soft classical music plays in the background as she rocks
gently back and forth, looking tenderly at her lap. A classic
maternal scene... except there's no baby. But she's not
crazy. The baby-to-be is still inside her womb, and the
woman is hoping that by reading to her baby and playing
classical music she's developing its mind as well as its
body. But is she?
In the early and mid-1990s, studies at the University of
California-Irvine found that listening to Mozart sonatas
improved the spatial-reasoning of college students. People
immediately jumped to the conclusion that classical music
improves intelligence, and the earlier people started listening
to it, the better. First mothers were urged to play music
for their toddlers, then their newborns... then their fetuses.
In fact, follow-up studies were unable to confirm the experiments'
results in adults or children.
Then Dutch researchers found that not only can late-term
fetuses "hear" sounds, but they can actually "learn."
The researchers exposed the fetus to a noise, then used
ultrasound to see how it reacted. They found the fetus reacted
to the sound more quickly each time it heard it. But there's
no evidence that this early "learning" has any
effect on later intelligence, either.
So is there anything women can do during pregnancy to increase
their babies' intelligence?
"The most important thing you can do to ensure a healthy
baby and promote a healthy brain and mental abilities, is
to have the healthiest pregnancy possible," says Lise
Eliot, Ph.D., assistant professor of neuroscience at The
Chicago Medical School, and author of What's Going on
in There? How the Brain and Mind Develop in the First Years
of Life.
For those who want more specifics, here are a few suggestions:
- Avoid smoking, drinking and drugs.
All of these are known to impair neurological development.
- Gain enough weight for the baby to grow
adequately. Obstetricians usually recommend women
gain between 25 and 35 pounds. Too much weight gain can
lead to a large baby and a difficult delivery, which can
be risky to a new baby's brain. But not gaining enough
weight is dangerous, too, since lower birthweight babies
tend to have smaller heads and smaller brains, which has
been linked with lower I.Q.
- Eat a well-balanced diet, and
take a multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Dr.
Eliot explains that there are 45 essential nutrients our
bodies need, "and the vast majority of these are
known to be necessary for neurological development."
Some examples:
- Iodine. Necessary for making
thyroid hormone, which is essential for brain development.
(Most women in the U.S. get plenty of iodine from
iodized table salt.)
- Iron. If a woman doesn't have
enough iron, she can't make enough red blood cells
to transport oxygen to the baby, affecting brain and
body growth. That's why obstetricians monitor so closely
for anemia.
- B vitamins, including folic acid.
Essential for fetal development, especially during
the first month of gestation.
- Practice good hygiene to avoid viral
infections. "A lot of viruses are very dangerous
to the fetus even when the mother has no symptoms,"
says Dr. Eliot. She suggests pregnant women wash their
hands frequently, avoid sharing food with toddlers and
small children, and report any symptoms to a doctor. Pregnant
women are now advised to get flu shots either before pregnancy
or after the first trimester.
- Exercise. This one's surprising,
but there's evidence that mothers who continue to work
out during their pregnancy have smarter babies. James
F. Clapp, M.D., of Case Western Reserve University in
Cleveland, compared the children of pregnant women who
continued to exercise throughout their pregnancy with
the children of women who gave it up. He found that at
five years of age, the children of the exercisers scored
significantly higher on tests of general intelligence
and language skills.
If you do all this and still want to play classical music
and read to your unborn baby, go right ahead. "It
can't do any harm," says Dr. Eliot. "And maybe
it even helps... in the sense that a mother who would
take the trouble to read to or play music to her stomach
is probably very motivated to take good care of her baby
when it arrives!"
Beth Weinhouse is a frequent contributor to Your
Baby Today. She specializes in women's and children's
health issues and lives in Oxford, Mississippi with her
husband and 6-year-old son.
The content on these pages is provided
as general information only and should not be substituted
for the advice of your physician.
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One Networks
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