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Lower fetal status of docosahexaenoic acid, arachidonic acid and essential fatty acids is associated with less favorable neonatal neurological condition
Authors:Dijck-Brouwer D A Janneke  Hadders-Algra Mijna  Bouwstra Hylco  Decsi Tamás  Boehm Günther  Martini Ingrid A  Boersma E Rudy  Muskiet Frits A J
Institution:Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University Hospital Groningen (DAJD-B, FAJM), Hanzeplein 1, 9714 GZ Gronigen, The Netherlands. d.a.j.brouwer@lc.azg.nl
Abstract:Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, notably arachidonic (AA) and docosahexaenoic (DHA) acids are abundant in brain and may be conditionally essential in fetal life. We investigated umbilical artery (UA) and vein (UV) fatty acid compositions and early neonatal neurological condition in 317 term infants. Neurological condition was summarized as a clinical classification and a 'neurological optimality score' (NOS). Neurologically abnormal infants (n=27) had lower UV DHA and essential fatty acid (EFA) status. NOS correlated positively with AA (UV), and EFA (UV) and DHA status (UV and UA) and negatively with 18:2omega6 and omega9 (UV), and 20:3omega9, omega7 and C18 trans fatty acids (UV and UA). UV DHA, AA, saturated fatty acids, gestational age and obstetrical optimality score explained 16.2% of the NOS variance. Early postnatal neurological condition seems negatively influenced by lower fetal DHA, AA and EFA status. C18 trans fatty acids and 18:2omega6 may exert negative effects by impairment of LCP status.
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