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Breaking News on Food & Beverage Development
Pomegranate
might fight brain damage in babies
29/06/2005-
A mouse study conducted at the Washington University School
of Medicine suggests that drinking pomegranate juice during pregnancy
may reduce the hypoxia ischemia-related brain injuries in babies, writes
Jess Halliday.
Hypoxia ischemia, a
condition brought about by decreased blood flow and oxygen to the
baby’s brain, is linked to premature birth and other complications
during pregnancy. It causes brain injury in two of every 1,000 full-term
human births, and in a high percentage of premature babies born before
34 weeks.
Long-term
effects of the condition include seizures, hypoxic ischemic
encephalopathy and cerebral palsy.
Pomegranates
have a very high polyphenol content – antioxidant compounds also found
in blueberries, green tea and red wine in significant quantities.
Research has shown that dietary supplementation with polyphenol-rich
foods may protect the brain in adult models of ischemia and
Alzheimer’s disease.
"Hypoxic
ischemic brain injury in newborns is very difficult to treat, and right
now there's very little we can do to stop or reverse its
consequences," said senior author David Holtzman,
head of the university’s neurology department.
"Most
of our efforts focus on stopping it when it happens, but if we could
treat everyone who's at risk preventively, we may be able to reduce the
impacts of these kinds of injuries."
Holzman
hypothesizes that for pregnant women pomegranate may be a useful
alternative source of polyphenols to red wine, as alcohol can increase
the risk of birth defects.
To
test the theory in a mouse model, the researchers gave pregnant female
mice water mixed with one of three doses of pomegranate juice during the
last third of gestation and throughout the seven days of litter
suckling. Control groups were given plain water, sugar water or vitamin
C water.
They
then temporarily reduced oxygen levels and blood flow in the brains of
the pups – a procedure that produces effects similar to those seen in
human infants with hypoxia ischemia injuries.
After
24 hours brain injury was assessed biochemically, and after one week
histiologically to establish percentage of brain tissue area lost.
In
the brains of the mice whose mothers had drunk the pomegranate juice,
brain tissue loss was more than 60 percent less in all three areas
examined (cortex, hippocampus and striatum), with the best effect seen
with the highest dose.
The
results of the study, which was conducted in collaboration with POM
Wonderful, are published in Pediatric
Research (57:858-864 (2005).
Holtzman
said that the results indicate that a study involving human
mothers-to-be would be useful, but he advised that it would be difficult
to assemble a sufficiently large study group due to the relative
unpredictability of hypoxia ischemia in newborns.
Nonetheless,
he said: "One might advise this
group that studies in animals have suggested that drinking pomegranate
juice may reduce the risk of injury from hypoxia ischemia."
Ongoing
research projects for his team include attempting to isolate the
neuroprotective ingredients in pomegranate juice with a view to
concentrating them and testing their ability to reduce brain injury.
Future plans involve testing the efficacy of pomegranate polyphenols in
slowing the progression of other neurological disorders like
Alzheimer’s disease.
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