Literature DB >> 9577518

Family size, childhood infections and atopic diseases. The Aberdeen WHEASE Group.

C Bodner1, D Godden, A Seaton.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study addresses the causes of the increases in childhood asthma and allergic disease. On the basis of an observed inverse relationship between family size and allergic disease or atopy, it has been proposed that a fall in common childhood infections may have been responsible for the rise in asthma. This study was undertaken to investigate the relationships between family size and reported allergic disease and to test the hypothesis that an inverse relationship between the two is a consequence of childhood infections.
METHODS: Data had been obtained in a 1964 cross sectional survey of a random sample of Aberdeen schoolchildren aged between 10 and 14 in that year. Records of the presence or absence of asthma, eczema, or hay fever at the time of the survey and a history of measles, pertussis, varicella, rubella, and mumps before and after the age of three years were available for 2111 subjects.
RESULTS: The risks of hay fever (odds ratio 0.2, 95% CI 0.1 to 0.8) and eczema (OR 0.3, CI 0.1 to 0.7) were inversely related to having had three or more older siblings, whilst the risk of asthma (OR 0.4, CI 0.1 to 0.9) was inversely related to having had three or more younger siblings. Increasing total numbers of siblings showed a significant trend in protection against both eczema and hay fever. A weak protective effect against asthma was found for measles after the age of three (OR 0.5, CI 0.3 to 0.9) and slight increases in the risk of eczema were associated with having had rubella or pertussis and of asthma with having had varicella. The number of infections before the age of three was associated with a significant trend in the odds ratios towards increased risk of asthma (p = 0.025). There were significant trends in the odds ratios towards greater risk of eczema and hay fever with increasing exposure to rubella, mumps, and varicella. These relations between infection and atopic diseases were independent of the potential confounding factors age, sex, father's social class, and total number of siblings.
CONCLUSIONS: These data add to the accumulating evidence that membership of a large sibship confers some protection against atopic disease. This does not appear to be explained by the common childhood infections which show conflicting relationships with atopic disease, in that measles may have some protective effect against asthma but the more infections a child has had, the more likely he or she is to have atopic disease. The explanation of the sibship effect is likely to lie elsewhere and the fall in common childhood infections is unlikely to explain the rise in atopic disease.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9577518      PMCID: PMC1758702          DOI: 10.1136/thx.53.1.28

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Thorax        ISSN: 0040-6376            Impact factor:   9.139


  22 in total

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8.  Reciprocal regulatory effects of IFN-gamma and IL-4 on the in vitro development of human Th1 and Th2 clones.

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9.  Reduced interferon-gamma secretion in neonates and subsequent atopy.

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  39 in total

1.  Infections prevent the development of asthma--true, false or both?

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Review 2.  Family size, infection and atopy: the first decade of the "hygiene hypothesis".

Authors:  D P Strachan
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2000-08       Impact factor: 9.139

Review 3.  Epidemiology of allergic rhinitis.

Authors:  R Michael Sly
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4.  Age at childhood infections and risk of atopy.

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Review 5.  Probiotics in the management and prevention of atopy.

Authors:  John Bienenstock; Ryan E Wiley; G Scott Neigh; Susan Waserman; Paul Keith
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Review 6.  Pollution and the immune response: atopic diseases--are we too dirty or too clean?

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Review 7.  The burden of childhood asthma.

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8.  Immunization and symptoms of atopic disease in children: results from the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood.

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9.  Early exposure to children in family and day care as related to adult asthma and hay fever: results from the European Community Respiratory Health Survey.

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10.  Childhood infections and risk of wheezing and allergic sensitisation at age 7-8 years.

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