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Early Day Care Attendance May Protect Infants
From Asthma Later
Janet Rothers, MS, and colleagues examined the relationship
between the age at which day care attendance begins
and the amount of immunoglobulin E (IgE) in a child’s
blood. IgE is an antibody produced by the immune system
and an indicator of allergic sensitivity.
Researchers found:
* Children who went to day care by 3 months of age
had lowered IgE levels. The IgE levels of day care
children remained low through age 3 years, but this
protection appeared to be limited to children whose
mothers have asthma or a family history of susceptibility
to allergy.
* Children who attended day care outside their own home had lower IgE levels
than those who attended day care in their own home with children not their
siblings, or than children who didn’t attend day care.
The authors speculate that regular exposure to bacteria
from two different environments may play a role in
immune development and supports the idea that there
may be a critically short period when such bacterial
exposure can guide the immature immune system to develop
on a healthy path.
The study, “Influence of early day care exposure
on total IgE levels through age 3 years” can
be found in the Articles in Press section of the JACI
Web site. The JACI is the peer-reviewed journal of
the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. |