Breaking Medical News Archive
Poor Intrauterine Nutrition Linked to Risk
of Schizophrenia
posted 08/02/05
Infants exposed to inadequate nutrition during
intrauterine growth are
twice as likely to develop schizophrenia in
later life, compared to
other individuals, according to researchers
in Shanghai reporting in
tomorrow’s Journal
of the American Medical Association. Studying individuals
born during the 1959-1961 Chinese famine, the
researchers replicated
the findings of research on the Dutch Hunger
Winter of 1944-1945, in
which individuals conceived during the famine
and born to malnourished
mothers had double the risk of schizophrenia.
Although schizophrenia has a genetic component—monozygotic
twin
concordance rates approach 50 percent--there are also
environmental contributors,
including maternal nutrition.
St. Clair D, Xu M, Wang P, et al. Rates of
adult schizophrenia
following prenatal exposure to the Chinese
famine of 1959-1961. JAMA.
2005;294:557-562.
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