Mom’s diet may play role in whether
baby is boy or girl
CHICAGO (AP) — Snips and snails and puppydog
tails ... and cereal and bananas?
That could be what little boys are made of, according to
surprising new research suggesting that what a woman eats before pregnancy
influences the gender of her baby.
Having a hearty appetite, eating potassium-rich foods
including bananas, and not skipping breakfast all seemed to raise the odds of
having a boy.
The British research is billed as the first in humans to
show a link between a woman’s diet and whether she has a boy or girl.
It is not proof, but it fits with evidence from test tube
fertilization that male embryos thrive best with longer exposure to
nutrient-rich lab cultures, said Dr. Tarun Jain. He
is a fertility specialist at University of Illinois at Chicago who wasn’t
involved in the study.
It just might be that it takes more nutrients to build
boys than girls, he said.
University of Exeter researcher Fiona Mathews, the study’s
lead author, said the findings also fit with fertility research showing that
male embryos aren’t likely to survive in lab cultures with low sugar levels.
Skipping meals can result in low blood sugar levels.
Jain said he was skeptical when he first heard about the
research. But he said the study was well-done and merits follow-up study to see
if the theory proves true.
It’s not necessarily as far-fetched as it sounds. While
men’s sperm determine a baby’s gender, it could be that certain nutrients or
eating patterns make women’s bodies more hospitable to sperm carrying the male
chromosome, Jain said.
“It’s an interesting question. I’m not aware of anyone
else looking at it in this manner,” he said.
The study was published Wednesday in the Proceedings of
the Royal Society B, a British medical journal.
The research involved about 700 first-time pregnant women
in the United Kingdom who didn’t know the sex of their fetuses. They were asked
about their eating habits in the year before getting pregnant.
Among women with the highest calorie intake before
pregnancy (but still within a normal, healthy range), 56 percent had boys,
versus 45 percent of the women with the lowest calorie intake.
Women who ate at least one bowl of breakfast cereal daily
were 87 percent more likely to have boys than those who ate no more than one
bowlful per week. Cereal is a typical breakfast in Britain and in the study,
eating very little cereal was considered a possible sign of skipping breakfast,
Mathews said.
Compared with the women who had girls, those who had boys
ate an additional 300 milligrams of potassium daily on average, “which links
quite nicely with the old wives’ tale that if you eat bananas you’ll have a
boy,” Mathews said.
Women who had boys also ate about 400 calories more daily
than those who had girls, on average, she said.
Still, no one’s recommending pigging out if you really
want a boy or starving yourself if you’d prefer a girl.
Neither style of eating
is healthy, and besides all the health risks linked with excess weight,
other research suggests obese women have a harder time getting pregnant.
The study results reflect women at opposite ends of a
normal eating pattern, not those with extreme habits, Mathews said.
Professor Stuart West of the University of Edinburgh said
the results echo research in some animals.
And Dr. Michael Lu, an associate professor of obstetrics,
gynecology and public health at the University of California at Los Angeles,
said the results “are certainly plausible from an evolutionary biology
perspective.”
In other words, since boys tend to be bigger, it would
make sense that it would take more calories to create them, Lu said.
Still, Lu said a woman’s diet before pregnancy may be a
marker for other factors in their lives that could influence their baby’s
gender, including timing of intercourse.
“The bottom line is, we still don’t know how to
advise patients in how to make boys,” he said.