New Delhi: A new study says that Vitamin A deficiency in pregnant women can increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease in children.


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The findings, published today in Acta Neuropathologica, indicate that early developmental stages are crucial periods during which brain tissue is "programmed" for the rest of a person`s life.


According to researchers from the University of British Columbia genetically-engineered mice, also demonstrate that supplements given to newborns with low levels of vitamin A could be effective in slowing the degenerative brain disease.


"Our study clearly shows that marginal deficiency of vitamin A, even as early as in pregnancy, has a detrimental effect on brain development and has long-lasting effect that may facilitate Alzheimer`s disease in later life," said Dr. Weihong Song.For this research, Song built on previous studies that have linked low levels of vitamin A with cognitive impairments.


The researchers examined the effects of vitamin A deprivation in the womb and infancy on Alzheimer`s model mice.


They found that even a mild vitamin A deficiency increased the production of amyloid beta, the protein that forms plaques that smother and ultimately kill neurons in Alzheimer`s disease.


Mice who were deprived in utero but then given supplements immediately after birth performed better on the tests than mice who weren`t given such supplements.


(With ANI inputs)