Human Immune System Has Not Adapted To Changes In The Environment: Increase In Allergies Due To The Disappearance Of Protective Factors
Main Category: AllergyAlso Included In: Immune System / Vaccines
Article Date: 29 Jan 2007 - 0:00 PDT
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It seems that the current "allergy epidemic" is due not so much to an increase in allergenic risk factors as to the disappearance of factors protecting people against allergies. The human immune system has not had the time to adapt to the rapid changes in the urban environment and way of life. These are the conclusions of Professor Tari Haahtela and his research team, who have been studying allergies in Finnish and Russian Karelia. Their project is part of the Academy's Microbes and Man Research Programme, the evaluation of which has just been completed.
The research was concerned with the prevalence of allergic diseases in Finnish and Russian Karelia as well as risk factors in schoolchildren and their mothers. The prevalence of atopic allergy was determined by skin prick tests and by measuring serum antibodies. Other data were collected by questionnaires.
In Finland, the risk of allergic predisposition in children is four times and in mothers 2.4 times greater than in Russia. There are also marked country differences in the prevalence of allergic diseases (asthma, allergic rhinitis and atopic eczema). Both in children and mothers their prevalence was significantly higher in Finland than in Russia. In an examination of generational differences it was found that children in Finland had more allergies than mothers, whereas in Russia the opposite was true. This suggests that the "allergy epidemic" in Finland is still ongoing, whereas in Russian Karelia it has hardly started.
Parental allergic disease was identified as a risk factor for allergies in children in both regions. Protective factors included farming as the family's main source of livelihood as well as having pets, especially in early childhood. In part these results lend support to earlier observations, in part they contradict them. An environment rich in microbes seems to generate widespread tolerance against various environmental allergens. In Russian Karelia, atopic allergy, an indirect indicator of westernization, has not increased during the past few generations.
About SUOMEN AKATEMIA (ACADEMY OF FINLAND)
Suomen Akatemia on tiederahoituksen asiantuntijaorganisaatio. Akatemian tehtaevaenae on edistaeae korkeatasoista tieteellistae tutkimusta - laatuun perustuvalla pitkaejaenteisellae tutkimusrahoituksella, - tieteen ja tiedepolitiikan asiantuntemuksella sekae - tieteen ja tutkimustyoen aseman vahvistamisella. Vuonna 2001 Akatemia rahoittaa paeaeasiassa yliopistoissa ja tutkimuslaitoksissa tehtaevaeae tutkimusta runsaalla miljardilla markalla (yli 180 miljoonalla eurolla). Se on noin 14 prosenttia Suomen valtion tutkimuspanostuksesta. Akatemian rahoittamissa hankkeissa tehdaeaen vuosittain noin 3000 tutkijatyoevuotta.
SUOMEN AKATEMIA (ACADEMY OF FINLAND)
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PO Box 99
00 501 Helsinki
http://www.aka.fi/
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MLA
15 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/61794.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/61794.php.
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What Does This Study Prove?
posted by Elizabeth F Cole MD on 29 Jan 2007 at 4:12 pmI think the conclusions based on a finger prick test, testing what? and measuring serum antibodies (which can be abnormal from recent infections as well as autoimmune diseases, etc., etc. etc., and histories taken, sound rather vague. Do the Finns studied vs the Russians , indeed reflect differences in exposure to differences in the amounts of allergenic chemicals used in daily life of those two distinct societies. Perhaps the author is actually saying that, but it is not clear if that is what is meant.
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