Birth Month Seen Linked
to Multiple Sclerosis Risk
People born in May in the northern hemisphere
have a higher than average risk of developing multiple sclerosis,
researchers said.
An analysis of data from studies
of more than 42,000 people in Canada, Britain, Denmark and Sweden
showed that May babies have a 13 percent increased chance of suffering
from the illness later in life, but that having a November birthday
decreased the average odds by 19 percent.
"If you are born in May, your risk
is higher than any other month and if you are born in November
your risk is lower than any other month," Professor George Ebers,
of Radcliffe Infirmary at the University of Oxford, said in an
interview.
The effect was similar in all the
countries but most prominent in Scotland which has the highest
rate of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the world, according to Ebers.
Although the scientists cannot
explain the correlation between birth month and MS, they suspect
it could be linked to exposure to sunlight and the mother's vitamin
D levels, which could influence the child's development.
Shorter days during the winter
months in the northern hemisphere limit the amount of sunlight
women are exposed to during pregnancy. The body makes vitamin
D from sunlight. Foods such as oily fish and egg yolk are rich
in the vitamin.
"It looks like something must be
happening very early, either in gestation or around the time of
birth, that determines one's subsequent risk of getting MS," Ebers
added.
MS occurs when immune system cells
attack and destroy the myelin sheath that protects the nerve cells
in the brain and spinal cord. The cause of the illness is unclear.
Scientists believe it may be due to a combination of genetic,
dietary and environmental factors.
The illness is rare in Africa and
most common in people living in colder countries. Most people
are diagnosed with the disorder between the ages of 20-50.
More women than men suffer from
MS, which can be difficult to diagnose because symptoms such as
tingling, fatigue, loss of balance and slurred speech are intermittent.
Ebers and his colleagues compared
birth months of 17,874 patients in Canada and 11,502 in Britain
with their unaffected siblings and the general population.
They pooled their findings with
data from studies in Denmark and Sweden.
"The risk factors responsible for
the effect of timing of birth must vary seasonally and probably
interact with development of the central nervous system or immune
system, or both," they said in a report published online by the
British Medical Journal.
They added that the findings could
partly explain the increased risk of MS in second generation Asian
and Caribbean migrants to the United Kingdom.
Reference
Source 89
December 7, 2004
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