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Opinion 'Eating this mineral in pregnancy - and before conception - can boost how your child's brain develops'

The evidence is very clear and yet we are among the countries in the world that is most deficient in this mineral, writes

DURING PREGNANCY, THERE’S a lot of advice around for mothers-to-be. But there’s one mineral that you can eat before and during pregnancy that can help boost your child’s brain.

What’s the secret?

The secret is in your diet, pre-conceptually and during your pregnancy. Very simply, it is your iodine intake which has a direct link with the brain of your child in the future. The evidence is very clear and yet we are among the most iodine deficient countries in the world. That doesn’t bode well.

Most countries have addressed this issue with a fortification policy; specifically, iodised salt. The Irish and the Brits have opted not to do this and as a result our iodine levels are the kind of ‘deficient’ usually associated with malnutrition and images of starving children on the Trócaire box.

Where to get this secret ingredient? Iodine is naturally found in fish and dairy products. But watch out modern Ireland, organic dairy has far less iodine, because iodine is traditionally used to disinfect milking teats and so sneaks into the milk in regular farming, but not organic milk farming.

For those following a vegan diet, iodine intake can be even lower. Seaweed could come to the rescue here. There are lots of fantastic Irish artisan companies harvesting wild Atlantic seaweed and producing great products including pasta, noodles and savoury sprinkles.

It looks quite different on your plate to the brown slimy stuff underfoot on
the beach and has that wonderful umami flavour.

Too much of a good thing 

There is a cautionary tale here though. Levels of iodine vary wildly in seaweeds, between species and from batch to batch. Too much of a good thing is often unhelpful and this is no exception. Iodine is the main nutrient required for thyroid function and incidence of thyroid disease is high in Ireland.

You might rightly wonder whether that is because we are deficient in the required raw material. But it’s never that simple. The most common cause of thyroid dysfunction is autoimmune in nature (which we also have our unfair share of).

Taking in too much iodine may make your thyroid work harder and can act as a red flag to a bull for your immune system. The net result is increasing the immune attack on your thyroid and making the situation worse.

Safety of supplements

Iodine supplements are recommended for pre- conception and in pregnancy in many countries, much like the advice to take folic acid.

Those countries must have really smart babies and an abundance of painfully proud parents. Ireland has not issued these recommendations because the data is not fully clear yet.

Much of the confusion has arisen from studies of iodine supplementation carried out in populations where they already had plenty, which more likely pushed the mamas into overdose rather than sorting a deficiency.

With our crippling iodine stats and lack of fortification, we are pretty good candidates to recommend iodine supplementation. Take it at a low dose, just to ‘supplement’ your diet and make sure to chat to your GP first if you have a thyroid condition.

Ciara Wright PhD DipNT is Senior Nutritionist and Director of Glenville Nutrition and The Wellness Crew.  

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15 Comments
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    Mute Martin
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 7:55 AM

    Clicking on this headline can cause clickbait in pregnancy.

    107
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    Mute DaisyMay
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 7:11 AM

    Next week. Iodine in pregnancy causes your baby to grow two arses.

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    Mute TamuMassif2019
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    Nov 3rd 2018, 11:16 PM

    @DaisyMay: They’re called twins lol.

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    Mute diarmuid o'riain
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 9:08 AM

    This article is little less than covert advertising. It is likely to create unnecessary alarm to those who are pregnant while unlikely to make a demonstrable difference in the outcome of their pregnancies. Can the author provide any evidence published in the scientific literature to support the assertions that a nutritional assessment is of benefit?

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    Mute An bhearna
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 10:10 AM

    @diarmuid o’riain: I always remember Dara O’Briain’s comment that a Nutritionist is to a Dietitian what a “Toothologist” is to a Dentist. Show the evidence based, peer reviewed science please

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Nov 3rd 2018, 10:46 PM

    Yup, another opinion piece. I’ll wait for the science.

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    Mute Toon Army
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 8:02 AM

    Why say “can” boost how your child’s brain develops when the evidence is supposedly very clear?

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    Mute K Lawlor
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 8:08 AM

    @Toon Army: because she is a genuine expert in the field. Only somebody trying to sell you something will make absolute claims like that.

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    Mute Gavin Conran
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 2:22 PM

    @K Lawlor: “Genuine Expert”?

    Nutritionists are not regulated by law – anybody can call themselves a nutritionist. 

    Dietitians might be what you are thinking of.

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    Mute Kinsaleable
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 10:38 AM

    I stopped reading when I saw that the article is the opinion of a “nutritionist”.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Nov 3rd 2018, 10:49 PM

    @Kinsaleable: That’s our malnourishment talking. Aren’t we sorry now that we didn’t eat more seaweed dipped in sewage? Imagine all the ecoli we could have in our bodies now.

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    Mute The Dons
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 9:26 AM

    What if you take those out of date nuclear bomb shielding iodine tablets the government sent us years ago, when ‘duck and cover’ was proven insufficient?

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    Mute Kem Trayle
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 3:38 PM

    Guys! Guys! She’s a SENIOR nutritionist. Show some respect!

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    Mute Pajo Mata
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 8:59 AM

    Cut out all the sh-t. A little if everything, a balanced diet. Problem solved.

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    Mute Gordon Walsh
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    Nov 2nd 2018, 12:03 PM

    Boost brain development, no amount of supplements is going to push them past the intelligent level constrained by their genetics – or is it not PC to acknowledge that intelligence levels naturally vary across a population

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