Bacteria Can Prevent Asthma In Infants & Toxins Threaten Reproductive Health – 5newsonline.com


5newsonline.com

Bacteria Can Prevent Asthma In Infants & Toxins Threaten Reproductive Health
5newsonline.com
Infants can be protected from getting asthma if they acquire four types of gut bacteria by the time they are three months old. That's the finding of a new study from the University of British Columbia. Researchers say most babies naturally acquire

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Certain gut bacteria may be tied to asthma risk in babies – Washington Post


TIME

Certain gut bacteria may be tied to asthma risk in babies
Washington Post
A new study suggests that certain gut microbes could be indicators of future asthma risk in babies. It's not clear that the microbes prevent asthma, per-say, so it's a bit early to start investing in baby probiotics. But the study is just the latest
Gut bacteria could be key in preventing asthma in childrenThe Verge
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Babies' Gut Bacteria May Signal Later Asthma RiskLive Science
Science /AAAS –Wall Street Journal –WebMD
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‘Good bacteria’ key to stopping asthma – BBC News


BBC News

'Good bacteria' key to stopping asthma
BBC News
Being exposed to "good bacteria" early in life could prevent asthma developing, say Canadian scientists. The team, reporting in Science Translational Medicine, were analysing the billions of bugs that naturally call the human body home. Their analysis
Gut bacteria could be key in preventing asthma in childrenThe Verge
Study Links Asthma to Low Levels of Gut Bacteria in NewbornsWall Street Journal
Gut bacteria could predict asthma in kidsScience /AAAS
TIME –WebMD
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Gut bacteria could be key in preventing asthma in children – The Verge


WIRED

Gut bacteria could be key in preventing asthma in children
The Verge
The guts of infants who are at high risk for asthma display low levels of four specific bacterial species when they are three months old, scientists have discovered. The finding could lead to a test that can more accurately predict which children might
Your Gut Microbiome Could Put You at a Higher Risk of AsthmaWIRED
Gut Bacteria May Contribute to Asthma Risk, Study ShowsTIME
Study Links Asthma to Low Levels of Gut Bacteria in NewbornsWall Street Journal
Science /AAAS –Live Science –Minneapolis Star Tribune
all 53 news articles »

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Effects of early-life exposure to allergens and bacteria on recurrent wheeze and atopy in urban children.

Related Articles

Effects of early-life exposure to allergens and bacteria on recurrent wheeze and atopy in urban children.

J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2014 May 28;

Authors: Lynch SV, Wood RA, Boushey H, Bacharier LB, Bloomberg GR, Kattan M, O’Connor GT, Sandel MT, Calatroni A, Matsui E, Johnson CC, Lynn H, Visness CM, Jaffee KF, Gergen PJ, Gold DR, Wright RJ, Fujimura K, Rauch M, Busse WW, Gern JE

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Wheezing illnesses cause major morbidity in infants and are frequent precursors to asthma.
OBJECTIVE: We sought to examine environmental factors associated with recurrent wheezing in inner-city environments.
METHODS: The Urban Environment and Childhood Asthma study examined a birth cohort at high risk for asthma (n = 560) in Baltimore, Boston, New York, and St Louis. Environmental assessments included allergen exposure and, in a nested case-control study of 104 children, the bacterial content of house dust collected in the first year of life. Associations were determined among environmental factors, aeroallergen sensitization, and recurrent wheezing at age 3 years.
RESULTS: Cumulative allergen exposure over the first 3 years was associated with allergic sensitization, and sensitization at age 3 years was related to recurrent wheeze. In contrast, first-year exposure to cockroach, mouse, and cat allergens was negatively associated with recurrent wheeze (odds ratio, 0.60, 0.65, and 0.75, respectively; P ? .01). Differences in house dust bacterial content in the first year, especially reduced exposure to specific Firmicutes and Bacteriodetes, was associated with atopy and atopic wheeze. Exposure to high levels of both allergens and this subset of bacteria in the first year of life was most common among children without atopy or wheeze.
CONCLUSIONS: In inner-city environments children with the highest exposure to specific allergens and bacteria during their first year were least likely to have recurrent wheeze and allergic sensitization. These findings suggest that concomitant exposure to high levels of certain allergens and bacteria in early life might be beneficial and suggest new preventive strategies for wheezing and allergic diseases.

PMID: 24908147 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Asthma and Allergy Risk Lowered by Early Bacteria, Dirt and Dander Exposure – Viral Global News


Viral Global News

Asthma and Allergy Risk Lowered by Early Bacteria, Dirt and Dander Exposure
Viral Global News
According to a new study, youngsters who are exposed to allergens and bacteria around their homes within a year after birth are less likely to suffer from allergies, breathing difficulties and asthma attacks later on in life. The study findings were

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More Germs, Less Asthma? Study Shows Babies Exposed to Bacteria and … – Black Press USA


Black Press USA

More Germs, Less Asthma? Study Shows Babies Exposed to Bacteria and
Black Press USA
It's long been known that poor children living in impoverished city neighborhoods are more likely to suffer from higher rates and worse cases of asthma compared to kids that grow up in higher-income areas or in rural environments—but the causes of the …

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