|
Rheumatoid
Arthritis Tied to Birth Weight
Excerpt
By Ed
Edelson, HealthScoutNews
A Swedish study finds a relationship between high birth weight
and development of rheumatoid arthritis later in life.
It's a puzzlement, as are the other
relationships found in the study, says Dr. Lennart Jacobsson,
who reports the finding in the May 17 issue of the British
Medical Journal. But then, a lot about rheumatoid arthritis
is puzzling.
This is not the wear-and-tear arthritis,
formally called osteoarthritis, that many people experience as
they grow older. Instead, it is an autoimmune disorder, in which
the body's immune system attacks joints and surrounding tissue
for unknown reasons.
"We know that genetics can
explain about 50 percent of cases," says Jacobsson, an associate
professor in the Malmö University Hospital department of
rheumatology. "We have not yet identified a major environmental
factor that is involved."
He and his colleagues tried to
identify such a factor by digging up the birth records of 77 people
with rheumatoid arthritis who were born in the Malmö area
between 1940 and 1960 and comparing them with the records of 308
area residents who don't have arthritis.
They looked at just about everything
in the perinatal period, the time around birth, that could be
looked at: mother's age, father's occupation, whether the baby
was breast-fed, the baby's weight at birth, whether the mother
had a previous miscarriage, and so on. And a few associations
emerged.
One of them was high birth weight.
Babies weighing more than 4,000 grams (about 9 pounds) were more
likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis than those of average weight.
Another was breast-feeding; breast-fed babies were less likely
to develop the disease. Another was the father's occupation. Babies
of office workers were more likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis
than those of manual laborers.
The birth weight association has
been seen in other studies, Jacobsson says, but he admits frankly,
"I can't say why it is so."
The journal paper proposes several
reasons for the association: the way the immune system develops
in the womb, the way the immune system develops after birth, or
simply "unmeasured confounding factors." Your guess
is as good as his about which might be correct, Jacobsson says.
He does plan more studies to get
a clearer picture of the genetic and environmental factors that
can lead to rheumatoid arthritis.
Jacobsson's attitude of bewilderment
is shared by many in the arthritis medical community. Asked, "What
is the cause of arthritis?" on a Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine Web site, Dr. Alan K. Matsumoto, an assistant
professor of medicine in the Hopkins division of molecular and
clinical rheumatology, posted this answer:
"There are many different
types of arthritis and each has different causes. Likely even
the same type of arthritis has multiple causes involving a complex
interplay of genetic and environmental factors. Ask me again in
50 years."
More information
You can get an overview of rheumatoid
arthritis from the Arthritis
Foundation or the National
Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases.
Reference
Source 101
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|