• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Ultrasounds Show Unborn Fetuses Making Disgusted Faces When Mom Eats Kale

September 22, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

The taste of kale is so repulsive to fetuses that it causes them to screw up their faces in disgust while in the womb, a new imaging study reveals. Researchers used 4D ultrasound to observe the reactions of 100 fetuses to the flavors ingested by their mothers, and found that they respond favorably to carrot but dislike leafy greens.

Though scientists have long suspected that human fetuses experience taste by ingesting nutrients dissolved in the amniotic fluid, no previous study had ever demonstrated this directly. Rather, the taste preferences of babies after birth has generally been considered indirect evidence of predilections developed in-utero.

Advertisement

“A number of studies have suggested that babies can taste and smell in the womb, but they are based on post-birth outcomes while our study is the first to see these reactions prior to birth,” explained study author Beyza Ustun in a statement.

“As a result, we think that this repeated exposure to flavors before birth could help to establish food preferences post-birth, which could be important when thinking about messaging around healthy eating and the potential for avoiding ‘food-fussiness’ when weaning.”

The researchers gave capsules containing either carrot or kale powder to pregnant women at both 32 and 36 weeks of gestation. Scans conducted shortly after ingestion revealed that fetuses were more likely to make “laughter-faces” when exposed to the taste of carrot and “cry-faces” after encountering the delights of kale.

A fetus makes a cry face in response to kale.

A fetus makes a “cry face” in response to kale. Image: FETAP (Fetal Taste Preferences) Study, Fetal and Neonatal Research Lab, Durham University

“This effect occurs within a relatively short time: Around 30 min after maternal ingestion of the flavor capsules, we detected observable facial reactions in the fetuses,” write the study authors. “Thus, in this short time, the flavor content of the capsules undergoes digestion, absorption into the mothers’ bloodstream, metabolization and circulation through the placenta and fetus, collection in the amniotic fluid, and fetal chemoreceptors.”

The researchers also noted that the grossed-out faces elicited by kale tend to develop later in pregnancy than the happy carrot faces. This, they say, is due to the fact that looks of disgust require more complex facial muscle contortions than contented expressions.

Ultimately, the results of this study may help to shed light on the development of human taste and smell receptors, and could facilitate the development of healthy eating habits by familiarizing babies with certain foods before they are born.

Advertisement

“It could be argued that repeated prenatal flavor exposures may lead to preferences for those flavors experienced postnatally,” said study author Jackie Blissett. “In other words, exposing the fetus to less ‘liked’ flavors, such as kale, might mean they get used to those flavors in utero.”

“The next step is to examine whether fetuses show less ‘negative’ responses to these flavors over time, resulting in greater acceptance of those flavors when babies first taste them outside of the womb.” 

Accordingly, the researchers are now conducting a follow-up study to determine how this experiment has affected the food preferences of these same babies after birth.

Advertisement

The study was published in the journal Psychological Science.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Merck KGaA lifts growth forecast for life science tools business
  2. Wall St extends gains following Fed statement
  3. Golf-Europe face ‘really tall task’ versus United States in Ryder Cup finale
  4. Journalists who took on Putin and Duterte win 2021 Nobel Peace Prize

Source Link: Ultrasounds Show Unborn Fetuses Making Disgusted Faces When Mom Eats Kale

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • In 1985, A Newborn Underwent Heart Surgery Without Pain Relief Because Doctors Didn’t Think Babies Could Feel Pain
  • Ancient Roman Military Officers Had Pet Monkeys, And The Pet Monkeys Had Pet Piglets
  • Lasting 29 Hours, The World’s Longest Commercial Scheduled Flight Is Set To Take Off This Week
  • What Is Christougenniatikophobia, And What Do I Do About It?
  • Sun’s Ancient Encounter With Two Hot Stars Left A Legacy In The Solar System’s Neighborhood
  • Defiant Stars And Unusual Objects Survive Against The Milky Way’s Supermassive Black Hole
  • A Wobbling Brown Dwarf Might Be A Sign Of The First Discovered “Exomoon” – A Moon Outside The Solar System
  • “Happy Molecule” Precursor Discovered In Extraterrestrial Material For The First Time
  • Why Do Seals Slap Their Belly?
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Appears To Be Experiencing “Cryovolcanism”, And Is Eerily Similar To Objects In The Outer Solar System
  • Catch The Last Supermoon Of The Year This Week
  • Why Does It Feel Like You’re Dropping Around 30 Seconds After A Plane Takes Off?
  • We Finally Understand Why We “Feel” It When We See Someone Get Hurt
  • The First Map Of America: Juan De La Cosa’s Strange Map Was Missing Until 1832
  • What’s The Difference Between Buffalo And Bison?
  • 18,000-Year-Old Stalagmite Sheds Light On Why Civilization Started In The Fertile Crescent
  • Enormous Anaconda Fossils Reveal They Got Big 12 Million Years Ago – And Stayed Big
  • Meet The Malaysian Earthtiger Tarantula: Secretive And Stripy With A Leg Span For Days
  • Meet The Thresher Shark, A Goofy Predator That Whips Up Cavitation Bubbles To Stun Prey
  • 18 Asteroids Passed Earth Closer Than The Moon In November – All Of Them Were Discovered That Month
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version