|
Siblings, Pets, Farms Help Stop Allergies
Having siblings, pets and living on
a farm reduces the risk of allergic illnesses in babies but having
early infections increases it, Danish researchers said.
Sterile, modern environments have
been blamed for the increase in asthma, dermatitis and other allergic
diseases over the past century because the immune systems of babies
are simply not exposed to many microbes.
Scientists also thought that early
infections would have a protective effect against allergies but
Christine Stabell Benn, of the Danish Epidemiological Science
Center in Copenhagen, found they increase the risk of developing
allergies.
"We found that having older siblings
protects against allergic diseases but it is not by means of transferring
infectious diseases because those diseases are actually associated
with an increased risk of disease in the child," Stabell Benn
said in an interview.
"With each infection the risk (of
an allergic illness) increases."
The human immune system developed
to deal with many different microbes. Scientists believe that
when it doesn't encounter them early in life, it overreacts later
and allergic diseases develop.
Pets, living on a farm, attending
day care and having older siblings increase a baby's exposure
to microbes.
Benn and her team interviewed 24,000
women during pregnancy and when their children were six and 18
months old. Their findings are reported online by the British
Medical Journal.
About 10 percent of the children
suffered from dermatitis at 18 months old. The researchers found
that the risk of allergic illness increased with each infectious
disease the child suffered before six months old, but it decreased
if the child had three or more siblings, attended day care or
lived on a farm or with pets.
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|