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Breastfed Babies Breathe Better, Except
When Mom Has Asthma
"Longer breastfeeding in infancy is associated
with improved lung function in later childhood, with
minimal effects on airflow in children of non-asthmatic
mothers," wrote Theresa W. Guilbert, M.D., of
the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Arizona
Respiratory Center at the University of Arizona in
Tucson. "However, longer breastfeeding in children
of mother with asthma demonstrates no improved lung
growth and significant decrease in airflows later in
life."
Dr. Guilbert, working with investigators from the
Arizona Respiratory Center, analyzed data from the
Children's Respiratory Study in Tucson, Arizona, a
prospective population based study of 1,246 infants
who were enrolled at birth and monitored through adolescence.
Of the original cohort, 679 participants who had performed
lung function tests between the ages of 11 and 16,
and disclosed complete data on infant-feeding practices
were included in the analysis.
Each participant was evaluated for lung function using
spirometry. The researchers measured lung volume [forced
vital capacity (FVC)] and airflows [forced expiratory
volume in one second (FEV1) and FEV1/FVC].
When analyzed as a whole, the group found that FEV1/FVC
was lower in breastfed children. However, when the
data was analyzed taking maternal allergy and asthma
into account, the observed lower airflows associated
with longer breastfeeding were only found in those
infants with asthmatic or allergic mothers.
"Breast fed children with non-atopic and non-asthmatic
mothers had an increase in lung volume and no decrease
in their airflows," wrote Dr. Guilbert. "However,
children of mothers with asthma who were breastfed
four months or more did not demonstrate any improvement
in lung volume. Further, they had a significant reduction
in airflows, suggesting that the risk for increased
asthma in children of asthmatic mothers may be partly
due to altered lung growth."
Dr. Guilbert speculates that the breast milk of non-asthmatic
mothers may contain certain factors that promote lung
development, citing several possible candidates including
cytokines, tumor necrosis factor, epithelial growth
factor, and prostaglandin. One cytokine in particular,
TGF- â1, is related to elastin production, which
is important to normal structure and function of the
lungs. The dose of TGF-â1 received by infants
via breast milk has been shown to be inversely related
to infant wheeze.
"These findings suggest that growth factors in
milk have the potential to modify lung development,
which might account for some of the protective effect
of breastfeeding against wheeze," wrote Dr. Guilbert.
The results of this study are supported by a recent
mouse study which found that mouse pups born to non-asthmatic
mothers who were breast fed by asthmatic foster mothers
developed increased airway hyperresponsiveness and
airway inflammation.
Dr. Guilbert cautions that the clinical implications
of these findings are not known. "Human milk is
uniquely suited to the feeding of infants, having been
subject to selective pressures for millennia," she
wrote. "It is premature to suggest any change
in breastfeeding recommendations based on one study,
particularly given the multiple well-documented benefits
of breastfeeding." |