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J S Forsyth a Tayside Institute of Child Health, University
of Dundee, Dundee DD1 9SY, b Department of Psychology, University of
Dundee, c Department of Paediatrics, University of Milan, Milan,
Italy, d Department
of Paediatrics, City Hospital, Birmingham B18 7QH, e Department of
Paediatrics, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium, f Numico Research, Friedrichsdorf,
Germany
Correspondence to: J S Forsyth j.stewart.forsyth{at}tuht.scot.nhs.uk
Objective:
To determine whether supplementation of
infant formula milk with long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids
(LCPUFAs) influences blood pressure in later childhood.
What is already known on this topic
Blood pressure differences in childhood are known to carry through into
adulthood Dietary omega 3 fatty acid supplementation can lower blood pressure in
adults with hypertension What this paper adds
Design:
Follow up of a multicentre, randomised
controlled trial.
Setting:
Four study centres in Europe.
Participants:
147 formula fed children, with a
reference group of 88 breastfed children.
Intervention:
In the original trial newborn infants
were randomised to be fed with a formula supplemented with LCPUFAs (n=111) or a formula without LCPUFAs but otherwise nutritionally similar (n=126). In the present follow up study the blood pressure of
the children at age 6 years was measured.
Main outcome measures:
Systolic, diastolic, and mean
blood pressure.
Results:
71 children in the LCPUFA supplementation group (64% of the original group) and 76 children in the
non-supplementation group (60%) were enrolled into the follow up
study. The LCPUFA group had significantly lower mean blood pressure
(mean difference
3.0 mm Hg (95% confidence interval
5.4 mm Hg to
0.5 mm Hg)) and diastolic blood pressure (mean difference
3.6 mm
Hg (
6.5 mm Hg to
0.6 mm Hg)) than the non-supplementation group.
The diastolic pressure of the breastfed children (n=88 (63%)) was significantly lower than that of the non-supplemented formula group but
did not differ from the LCPUFA formula group.
Conclusions:
Dietary supplementation with LCPUFAs
during infancy is associated with lower blood pressure in later
childhood. Blood pressure tends to track from childhood into adult
life, so early exposure to dietary LCPUFAs may reduce cardiovascular risk in adulthood.
Breast milk contains long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, and
breastfed children have lower blood pressure than children fed with
formula milk
Supplementation with long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids in infancy
results in lower blood pressure later in childhood
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