Mothers who breast-feed their children
may help to protect them from developing celiac disease,
an intolerance to a protein found in wheat, rye and barley,
scientists said.
In a review
of 15 studies, they found that the longer children are
breast fed the less likely they are to suffer from the
illness.
Breast
feeding may offer protection against the development of
celiac disease, said Dr Tony Akobeng of the Central Manchester
Children's University Hospital in England.
But he
and his team said in a report published in the Archives
of Disease in Childhood they are not sure whether breast
feeding delays the onset of symptoms of the illness or
provides permanent protection against it.
People
who suffer from celiac disease have an intolerance to
gluten and are unable to eat wheat, barley and rye products.
It is a genetic disease in which the immune system damages
the small intestine when gluten is eaten.
The review, which involved more than 4,000 children, showed
that if babies were breast-fed when they were introduced
to solid foods containing gluten, it cut their risk of
suffering from the illness by 52 percent compared to other
youngsters.
The researchers
said they are not sure how breast feeding protects a child
from the illness. They suspect it could reduce their exposure
to gluten or curb the immune system's response to the
protein.
Celiac
disease can produce a variety of symptoms including weight
loss, diarrhea, fatigue, muscle cramps and abdominal pain
and bloating. The only treatment is to eat a gluten-free
diet.
Reference
Source 125
November
21, 2005