Good Nutrition: The Best Way to Build Baby’s Brain By Judith Finlayson

If you’re a new parent, you’ve likely spent a lot of time researching ways to improve your baby’s cognitive skills. Traditional wisdom is that a child’s environment after birth fosters their ability to learn. Although strategies like listening to music and observing colorful mobiles stand the test of time, current research indicates that the capacity for intellectual development originates even before a baby is born. 

If you think that means genetic inheritance, think again. Although genes contribute to intelligence their influence is limited. It’s scattered across many different genes, each playing a tiny role. More significant is how those genes interact with their environment. This process is known as gene expression and it involves an area of science known as epigenetics. 

Epigenetics Explains How Babies Develop
Not coincidentally, epigenetics is the beating heart of prenatal development. As a fetus develops, its cells divide and differentiate. To oversimplify, the different cells it needs - brain, heart, liver, and so on - are created by epigenetic processes that involve switching specific genes on or off. 

Throughout life, many factors in addition to DNA influence gene expression. The epigenome links genes with their environment and its impact originates long before conception. We now know that epigenetic patterns are heritable, programming subsequent generations for health or illness.

For starters, life experiences leave epigenetic marks on cells, including reproductive cells - the sperm and egg that unite to form an embryo. Once conception occurs, a woman’s nutritional status prompts patterns of gene expression that impact her pregnancy. The food she eats, the air she breathes and the stress she experiences also affect how her baby’s genes are expressed. 

Poor nutrition raises the risk of delivering a baby with low birth weight, which has been linked with an increased risk for a wide range of chronic conditions like heart disease and diabetes. Focusing on brain development, full-term newborns weighing less than 5.5 pounds are more likely to have poor cognitive function. 

Deficient nutrition during pregnancy can spark alterations in gene expression that threaten a child’s school smarts. Researchers studying umbilical cord tissue have been able to connect these changes to cognitive performance and learning ability, as well as socially disruptive behavior and poor performance in school.

Poor Nutrition and Alcohol Unite
Consider fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. When a pregnant woman overindulges in alcohol, it compromises her body’s ability to utilize nutrients. Combined with the potentially toxic effects of alcohol, her nutritional deficiency increases the risk of negative pregnancy outcomes, including cognitive problems. 

Scientists don’t fully understand the cellular mechanisms but alcohol and poor nutrition appear to team up, destabilizing the expression of numerous genes. These risks can originate even before a baby is conceived - in part because a father’s sperm can transmit detrimental epigenetic modifications. Fathers who drink too much alcohol around the time of conception, increase their offspring’s risk for behavioral problems, including poor performance in school and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. 

Inflammation Hampers Brain Development
Maternal inflammation is another risk. It disrupts the delivery of key brain building nutrients to the fetus, sparking epigenetic changes that can sabotage brain development. Obesity, chronic stress and certain diseases trigger inflammation, as does a diet high in ultra-processed foods like sugar, refined carbs and unhealthy fats - staples in the so-called Standard American Diet. 

Various dietary approaches like the DASH diet and the Mediterranean Diet are very effective at lowering inflammation, among other benefits. Basically, these healthy eating plans are rich in plant-based, high-fiber foods like whole grains, fruits and vegetables, while limiting refined foods, including unhealthy fats. 

Plan for Pregnancy in Advance
Consuming a nutrient-dense diet prior to becoming pregnant supports a healthy pregnancy by improving negative patterns of gene expression that might be passed on to offspring.  Moreover, research shows that the effects of poor nutrition have the greatest impact during certain periods of development, including the first 8 weeks after conception. 

That’s why the time to begin thinking about having a baby is well before you become pregnant. Experts advise at least 3 months of preparation prior to pregnancy - the minimum required to boost sperm quality and build up the mother-to-be’s nutritional reserves. 

Make Sure You Have the Necessary Nutrients 
While it’s always important to consume a variety of nutrients, some are vital when you’re pregnant. These include folate, vitamins, B6 and B12, iron, zinc, iodine, vitamin A, vitamin D, calcium and choline.  All support various epigenetic processes with differing effects.  

Throughout pregnancy, rapid fetal growth requires additional calories, especially from protein and healthy fats. The research on the benefits of omega-3 supplementation during pregnancy is very robust. Omega-3 fatty acids are important at every stage from preconception through delivery and lactation, but especially during the last trimester when the baby’s brain and nervous system are forming.

Throughout the life cycle, epigenetics pulls strings that affect well-being. The science is complex but the message is simple. Eating a nutritious diet built around a variety of whole foods does more than keep you healthy. It establishes a legacy of wellness that helps to build hale and hearty offspring with aptly developed brains. 



Judith Finlayson is the author of You Are What Your Grandparents Ate:  What You Need to Know About Nutrition, Experience, Epigenetics, and the Origins of Chronic Disease. Visit her at www.judithfinlayson.com.  



Selected Resources

Goriounova, G and Mansvelder, H. Genes, Cells and Brain Areas of Intelligence. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 2019 

Shankar K. Effects of Pregnancy and Nutritional Status on Alcohol Metabolism. Alcohol Research and Health 2007. 

Miller, N.C., et al Maternal Nutrition and Child Neurodevelopment: Actions Across Generations. The Journal of Pediatrics 2017 

Goeden, N. et al. Maternal Inflammation Disrupts Fetal Nuerodevelopment via Increased Placental Output of Serotonin to the Fetal Brain. The Journal of Neuroscience 2016.