Taking Probiotics in Pregnancy, Giving to Infants, Doesn’t Prevent Asthma – Science Daily (press release)


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Taking Probiotics in Pregnancy, Giving to Infants, Doesn't Prevent Asthma
Science Daily (press release)
"Taking probiotics had no effect on the asthma rate," said Azad, who works in the Faculty's Department of Pediatrics. "We haven't shown there's any harm in giving probiotics, but it can't really be advised as a strategy to prevent asthma. "That doesn't
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Taking probiotics during pregnancy has no effect on asthma rate amoung infants – News-Medical.net


Science World Report

Taking probiotics during pregnancy has no effect on asthma rate amoung infants
News-Medical.net
Taking probiotics has health benefits but preventing childhood asthma isn't one of them, shows newly published research led by medical scientists at the University of Alberta. Meghan Azad, a Banting post-doctoral fellow in the Faculty of Medicine
Taking probiotics during pregnancy doesn't prevent asthma in kidsZee News
Probiotics during Pregnancy won't Help Prevent Asthma: StudyScience World Report

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Probiotics May Protect Infants From Allergy, but Not Asthma – Medscape

Probiotics May Protect Infants From Allergy, but Not Asthma
Medscape
Prenatal and postnatal administration of probiotics may reduce immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels in infants and protect against sensitization to hereditary allergies but may not protect against asthma or wheezing, according to a new meta-analysis. Nancy
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Asthma in Infants Linked to High Pollen Levels in Pregnancy – Medscape

Asthma in Infants Linked to High Pollen Levels in Pregnancy
Medscape
Maternal exposure to high levels of pollen during late pregnancy may be associated with an increased risk for infants being hospitalized for asthma during their first year of life, according to results from a register-based cohort study of more than
Mother-to-Be's Pollen Exposure May Boost Asthma Risk in BabyHealth.com

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Identifying infants at high risk of peanut allergy: The Learning Early About Peanut Allergy (LEAP) screening study.

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Identifying infants at high risk of peanut allergy: The Learning Early About Peanut Allergy (LEAP) screening study.

J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2012 Nov 19;

Authors: Du Toit G, Roberts G, Sayre PH, Plaut M, Bahnson HT, Mitchell H, Radulovic S, Chan S, Fox A, Turcanu V, Lack G, Learning Early About Peanut Allergy (LEAP) Study Team

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Peanut allergy (PA) is rare in countries in which peanuts are introduced early into infants’ diets. Learning Early About Peanut Allergy (LEAP) is an interventional study aiming to assess whether PA can be prevented by oral tolerance induction. OBJECTIVE: We sought to characterize a population screened for the risk of PA. METHODS: Subjects screened for the LEAP interventional trial comprise the LEAP screening study cohort. Infants were aged 4 to 10 months and passed a prescreening questionnaire. RESULTS: This analysis includes 834 infants (mean age, 7.8 months). They were split into the following: group I, patients with mild eczema and no egg allergy (n = 118); group II, patients with severe eczema, egg allergy, or both but 0-mm peanut skin prick test (SPT) wheal responses (n = 542); group III, patients with severe eczema, egg allergy, or both and 1- to 4-mm peanut wheal responses (n = 98); and group IV, patients with greater than 4-mm peanut wheal responses (n = 76). Unexpectedly, many (17%) in group II had peanut-specific IgE sensitization (?0.35 kU/L); 56% of group III were similarly sensitized. In contrast, none of the patients in group I and 91% of those in group IV had peanut-specific IgE sensitization. Sensitization on skin testing to peanut (SPT response of 1-4 mm vs 0 mm) was associated with egg allergy and severe eczema (odds ratio [OR], 2.31 [95% CI, 1.39-3.86] and 2.47 [95% CI, 1.14-5.34], respectively). Similar associations were observed with specific IgE sensitization. Black race was associated with a significantly higher risk of peanut-specific IgE sensitization (OR, 5.30 [95% CI, 2.85-9.86]). Paradoxically, for a given specific IgE level, black race was protective against cutaneous sensitization (OR, 0.15 [95% CI, 0.04-0.61]). CONCLUSION: Egg allergy, severe eczema, or both appear to be useful criteria for identifying high-risk infants with an intermediate level of peanut sensitization for entry into a PA prevention study. The relationship between specific IgE level and SPT sensitization needs to be considered within the context of race.

PMID: 23174658 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Infants fed fish may reduce asthma risk – UPI.com


Counsel & Heal

Infants fed fish may reduce asthma risk
UPI.com
20 (UPI) — Fish added to an infant's diet during the first year may reduce his or her risk of asthma, researchers in the Netherlands suggest. Jessica C. Kiefte-de Jong of the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam and colleagues at the Department of
Feeding Infants Fish May Reduce Their Chance of Contracting Asthma: StudyCounsel & Heal
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Feeding Infants Fish May Reduce Their Chance of Contracting Asthma: Study – Counsel & Heal


Counsel & Heal

Feeding Infants Fish May Reduce Their Chance of Contracting Asthma: Study
Counsel & Heal
A new study by Dutch researchers suggests that if children are fed fish in the first year of their life, it reduces their chance of contracting asthma in the future. The study was released Friday. Asthma affects over 40 million people around the world

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Eating fish as infants may reduce the chance of asthma – Examiner.com


ABC7Chicago.com

Eating fish as infants may reduce the chance of asthma
Examiner.com
Dutch researchers released a study on Friday that suggests if fish is added to an infant's diet during the first year it reduces the chance of them getting asthma in the future. Asthma is a lung disease that currently affects over 40 million people
Does Eating Fish During Infancy Cut Asthma Risk?U.S. News & World Report
Eating fish could reduce infants' asthma riskABC7Chicago.com
Health scanHindustan Times

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