AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore the link between prenatal iodine intake (dietary and supplemental) and infant temperament, noting the importance of iodine for fetal neurodevelopment.
  • Conducted within the PRISM study from 2011 to 2020, data from 892 mother-child pairs indicated that many women had inadequate iodine intake, with 49% falling below recommended levels.
  • Results showed that girls whose mothers had adequate iodine intake displayed higher levels of extraversion, while boys showed statistically insignificant higher negative affectivity, suggesting low iodine intake could affect infant temperament and early neurodevelopment.

Article Abstract

Objective: Maternal iodine plays a central role in fetal neurodevelopment. It is recommended that pregnant women consume sufficient levels of iodine to accommodate increased need for mother and fetus. We examined associations among prenatal dietary and supplemental iodine intake and infant temperament.

Design: The PRogramming of Intergenerational Stress Mechanisms (PRISM) study is an ongoing longitudinal pregnancy cohort. Data from 2011 to 2020 were used for this study. Women completed the Block98 FFQ ascertaining prenatal dietary and supplemental iodine intake and the Infant Behavior Questionnaire-Revised at infant age 6 months to ascertain infant temperament (Surgency/Extraversion, Negative Affectivity and Orienting/Regulation).

Setting: USA.

Participants: Mother-child dyads ( 892).

Results: Women were primarily Black/Hispanic Black (44 %) and non-Black Hispanic (35 %) with 46 % reporting household income < $25 000/year. Nearly half had an estimated average requirement (EAR) < 160 µg/d (49 % based on dietary intake; 43 % based on diet and supplements). Girls born to women with an EAR ≥ 160 µg/d compared to girls born to women below this level had higher unadjusted extraversion scores for dietary plus supplemental intake ( = 0·23 (0·13, 0·33)); decreased to = 0·05 (-0·08, 0·19) after adjusting for covariates. Boys born to women with an EAR ≥ 160 µg/d (based on diet and supplements) as compared to boys born to women below this level had statistically non-significant higher unadjusted negative affective score ( = 0·06 (-0·08, 0·20)) that became significantly lower upon covariate adjustment ( = -1·66 (-1·97, -1·35)).

Conclusions: A significant proportion of these women reported suboptimal prenatal iodine intake. Suboptimal prenatal iodine intake may have implications for child neurodevelopment evident as early as infancy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11645109PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1368980024001575DOI Listing

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