- Brain Volume, Health Linked to Socioeconomic Status
- Cruise Passenger Dies Amid Norovirus Outbreak That Sickened Dozens
- Early Physical Therapy Key for Concussion Recovery, Study Shows
- Dogs Can Help Detect, Remove Spotted Lantern Flies
- The Heart Disease, Breast Cancer Link
- Psychedelics May Boost Mental Health of People with Cancer in Recovery
- Social Life Protects From Stroke, Infections, Blood Proteins Suggest
- About 50% of Adults Resolve to Try New Diet, Survey Says
- 7 Surprising Ways to Make 2025 Healthy
- Alcohol Intake Increases Cancer Risk, Beverages Should Carry Warning: Surgeon General
New Guidelines Reaffirm Prenatal Folic Acid to Curb Birth Defects
In a recommendation that reaffirms previous guidelines, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force said that folic acid supplements reduce the risk of neural tube defects.
As it advised in 2009, the independent panel of experts said women who are pregnant or able to get pregnant should take a daily supplement that contains between 400 and 800 micrograms of folic acid to prevent these potentially fatal birth defects.
Neural tube defects occur when the brain or spinal cord do not develop properly, leading to serious disabilities or even death. These birth defects take place very early in pregnancy. Sometimes they occur even before a woman knows that she is expecting, the task force explained.
Folic acid supplements are most beneficial if women take them one month before becoming pregnant and continue taking them for the first three months of pregnancy, the panel concluded.
Folic acid is a naturally occurring B vitamin found in many fruits and vegetables, such as leafy greens, broccoli and orange juice. In the United States, many foods are also fortified with folic acid.
Still, many women don’t get the recommended amount of folic acid through their diet, according to the recommendations published online Jan. 10 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
“The task force found convincing evidence that the risk of neural tube defects can be reduced when women take a daily folic acid supplement of 400 to 800 micrograms,” said task force member Dr. Alex Kemper.
“These supplements can be taken as a daily multivitamin, prenatal vitamin or single tablet that has the recommended amount of folic acid,” Kemper said in a task force news release. He is a professor of pediatrics at Duke University Medical School, in Durham, N.C.
More information
The March of Dimes has more about neural tube defects.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.