Journal article

Maternal inflammatory and omega-3 fatty acid pathways mediate the association between socioeconomic disadvantage and childhood cognition

W Marx, S Thomson, M O'Hely, C Symeonides, F Collier, MLK Tang, A Loughman, D Burgner, R Saffery, C Pham, T Mansell, PD Sly, P Vuillermin, S Ranganathan, AL Ponsonby

Brain Behavior and Immunity | Published : 2022

Abstract

Poor cognitive outcomes in early childhood predict poor educational outcomes and diminished health over the life course. We sought to investigate (i) whether maternal metabolites predict child cognition, and (ii) if maternal metabolomic profile mediates the relationship between environmental exposures and child cognition. Metabolites were measured using nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolomics in pregnant women from a population-derived birth cohort. Child cognition was measured at age 2 years. In 662 mother–child pairs, elevated inflammatory markers (β = −2.62; 95% CI −4.10, −1.15; P = 0.0005) and lower omega-3 fatty acid-related metabolites (β = 0.49; 95% CI 0.09, 0.88; P = 0.02) in t..

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