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Breast-Feeding May Boost
Baby's Own Immune System
Excerpt By Clementine
Wallace, Reuter's Health
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - During breast-feeding, substances
that protect against infection are passed from mother to child.
Now a new study suggests that breast-feeding may also boost an
infant's own immune response against infections later on in childhood.
"In the past 10 years, we have
been realizing that breast-feeding brings much more than we thought,"
said Dr. Lars Hanson, from the University of Goteborg in Sweden.
"Not only are some of the mother's defenses passed on to the child,
but breast-feeding actually seems to activate something in the
baby's own defense system."
Hanson, Dr. Sven-Arne Silfverdal,
from the Orebro Medical Center Hospital in Sweden, and colleagues
looked at children under age 6 who had been seriously ill with
Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), a type of bacteria that can
cause pneumonia, meningitis, and other potentially life-threatening
infections. The children became ill in the late 1980s and early
1990s, before a Hib vaccine became available in Sweden.
The researchers found that youngsters
18 months or older who had been breast-fed exclusively for more
than 13 weeks (average 19 weeks) had a stronger immune response
to Hib than those breast-fed exclusively for less than 13 weeks
(average 5 weeks). There was no difference in immune response
in children under 18 months of age, according to the report published
in the Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal.
Vaccination against Hib now exists
in most countries, but the bacterium still poses a threat in poor
countries with inadequate healthcare programs and vaccination,
according to the report. Moreover, this report could be used as
a model to study the protective benefits of breast-feeding against
other types of diseases and infections, Hanson said.
"Convincing studies also demonstrate
significant protection against diarrhea, respiratory tract infections,
otitis media (ear infections), or urinary tract infection, for
instance," he said.
In previous studies, Silfverdal's
team also suggested that this immune system enhancement could
last over the years, beyond the period of breast-feeding itself.
"We don't really understand how
that might work, but the information is growing that longer periods
of breast-feeding may afford more complete protection not only
against certain diseases that may occur during breast-feeding,
but also against disorders that surface long after breast-feeding
is over," said Dr. Armond Goldman, from the University of Texas
Medical Branch in Galveston, who was not involved in the study.
The point when a child no longer
requires this immunological support via breast-feeding has not
yet been established, according to Hanson, but "the more the better
and the longer the better," he said.
Current recommendations suggest
that exclusive breast-feeding should be continued for the first
4 to 6 months of life and up to a year if possible, according
to Goldman, which is not always an easy recommendation to follow
in the US.
"It's easy to say that people should
be child-centered," he said, "but there are obvious socioeconomic
factors that have to be taken into consideration and mothers also
need an adequate environmental support to be able to breast-feed.
Many factors come into play that make breast-feeding difficult."
SOURCE: The Pediatric Infectious
Disease Journal 2002;21:816-821.
Reference
Source 89
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