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Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

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Domino
Always My Miracle

Member since 9/05

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Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

Maybe I CAN convince DH to get another kitty!Chat Icon

(CBS) Conventional medical wisdom has always assumed that the presence of pets puts children at a higher risk of developing allergies.

But more and more evidence is proving that the opposite is true. Children raised in a house with two or more dogs or cats during the first year of life may be less likely to develop allergic diseases as compared with children raised without pets, according to a study in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Dr. Dennis Ownby, the chief investigator of the study printed in JAMA, explains on The Early Show that allergists were trained for generations that dogs and cats in the house were bad because they increased the risk of kids becoming allergic to them. The views were based on the knowledge that before you become allergic to something, you have to be repeatedly exposed to it.

The latest study, he says, finds that the reverse seems to be true. Children who grow up with dogs and cats in the home have a significantly reduced risk of developing pet allergies — plus common ones, like allergies to pollens and molds — by as much as 50 percent or more.

This study followed hundreds of children from birth to nearly age 7. Ownby says that he and his researchers simply started looking at their data to see if exposure to dogs and cats really increased the risk of allergies. The data generated surprised researchers because it concluded that pets gave the opposite reaction. However, the findings only applied to infants exposed during their first year of life, when the immune system is still developing.

The researchers think that exposure to dogs and cats leads to lower risks of allergies because children living with these animals are probably exposed to higher levels of endotoxins, the breakdown products of bacteria commonly found in the mouth of a cat or dog. Exposure to endotoxins is thought to force the body's immune system to develop a different pattern of response that makes you less likely to become allergic.

Immediate allergic reactions are caused when immunoglobulin E, a class of antibodies that causes allergic responses, become bound to mast cells, a type of white blood cell. This coupling is needed because antibodies recognize allergens but it's the mast cells that release histamines and other chemicals that cause allergic symptoms, the most rapid type of immune response. The result can be swelling, redness and itching within minutes. But there are checks and balances within the immune system, and allergic sensitivity can also be regulated by other portions of the immune system.

Ownby theorizes that early exposure to endotoxin activates a down-regulatory portion of the immune system, reducing the risk of allergies. He notes that several studies in this country and others have provided the first bits of evidence suggesting that exposure to animals may reduce a child's risk of allergies. For example, studies in Germany and Switzerland have shown that city dwellers' children have higher rates of allergies than children of farmers.

The Opposite Reaction

The children in the study were born between 1987 and 1989 to largely white, middle-class parents who were members of a large, Midwestern health maintenance organization. The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Doctors followed a group of 474 healthy babies in the Detroit area from birth to about age 7, comparing the 184 exposed during infancy to two or more dogs or cats to the 220 who were not exposed to these animals.

When the children were one year old, the researchers contacted parents by telephone to find out how many pets were in the home. When the children were two years old, researchers measured the level of dust mite allergen in their bedrooms. When the children were six or seven, the researchers tested them for allergic antibodies to common allergens by two approaches — a skin prick test and a blood measurement. Allergies usually do not develop until children are older.

They found that the children exposed to two or more indoor pets were half as likely to develop common allergies. Children exposed to two or more dogs or cats during the first year of life were on average 66 to 77 percent less likely to have any allergic antibodies to common allergens, as compared with children exposed to only one or no pets during their first year.

Both girls and boys with pets had fewer positive skin tests than those without to common indoor allergens (dust mite, cat and dog) and outdoor allergens (grass, ragweed and Alternaria, a fungus found in air). The reduction remained significant even after adjusting for risk factors such as older siblings, parental history of asthma and parental smoking. Also, fewer of the children who had early exposure to indoor pets had hyper-responsive and easily irritated airways, a risk factor for asthma. Reactivity was based on the airway's response to a chemical stimulant called methacholine. Children raised with two or more dogs or cats had 45 percent less hyper-reactivity. The boys experienced an even greater reduction of asthmatic symptoms than girls. About 7 percent of the children developed asthma during the study, which is on par with national averages.

The results were exactly the opposite of what Ownby and his team would have predicted from the beginning, and the study is a significant contribution to the mounting evidence that the things allergists have believed for years and parents have lived by are wrong. The striking finding here is that high pet exposure early in life appears to protect against not only pet allergy but also other types of common allergies, such as allergy to dust mites, ragweed, and grass. Other studies have suggested a protective effect of pet exposure on allergy and asthma symptoms but generally have looked only at whether pet exposure reduced pet allergy. This new finding changes the way scientists think about pet exposure.

Scientists must now figure out how pet exposure causes a general shift of the immune system away from an allergic response.

Some of the Study Findings

Cat allergies: 15.5 percent of the children without a dog or cat in the home were allergic to cats, compared to 11.6 percent with one cat or dog and 7.7 percent with two or more pets in their home.


Dog allergies: 8.6 percent of the children without a dog or cat in the home were allergic to dogs, compared to 3.5 percent with one cat or dog and 2.6 percent with two or more pets in their home.


Atopy (positive test to any of several common allergens including cat, dog and grass): 33.6 percent of children were allergic without exposure to dogs or cats, compared to 15.4 percent allergic with regular exposure to two or more of the animals. The exception here was a slight increase in allergies - from 33.6 to 34.3 percent - for children exposed to only one dog or cat.


Society Too Sterile?

The bottom line is that maybe part of the reason we have so many children with allergies and asthma is we live too clean a life. When kids play with cats or dogs and the animals lick them, the transfer of bacteria may be changing the way the child's immune system responds in a way that helps protect against allergies. Parents should not be concerned about having pets in the home with a new baby but the findings do not go far enough in allergy prevention to warrant the purchase of pets.

Perhaps one day, scientists might be able to develop a new allergy therapy based on future research on pets and their bacteria.

Source

Posted 8/28/09 3:50 PM
 
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anonttcer
BOOOO for fall!

Member since 7/06

10082 total posts

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Meaning a NON ttcer!

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

I'm a strong believer in this.
Because if you expose yourself to an allergan enough- you eventually build a tolerance to it.
That is the whole idea behind allergy shots- they inject you with the allergan so your body can build it's natural tolerance to it over time...

Posted 8/28/09 4:54 PM
 

Goobster
:)

Member since 5/07

27557 total posts

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:)

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

I believe it too. I had cats growing up and my siblings and I barely have any allergies.

DH and his family had none, they all have allergies.

I believe it. I hope my DD is better off than my DH since we have dogs.

Posted 8/29/09 11:31 PM
 

Shanti
True love

Member since 6/05

12653 total posts

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Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

This makes sense.

Posted 8/30/09 9:26 AM
 

shiv
Twinsanity!!

Member since 5/07

4747 total posts

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Shiv

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

My family had dogs my whole life, including when I was an infant. I have BAD pet allergies!

I have more allergies to cats, can't go near or ever touch one. But there are dogs- the bigger ones with alot of dander, that I am very allergic to. I was sick my entire adolescent/tennage/young adult years living in my house and did not get better until I moved out.

I now have 2 small pomeranians,that I am not allergic to. I get allergy shots every week and have a HEPA filter installed in our CAC. However, If I step into my moms house, I start to breakout in hives because of our family dog- a lab rotti mix.

So, not sure how correct this study is. Maybe for the average person it's true, but if you have a kid whose very allergic, there is little to prevent that. I'm allergic to alot of things, not just animals. The rest of my family is allergy-free.

Message edited 9/1/2009 1:51:32 PM.

Posted 9/1/09 1:49 PM
 

MrsFlatbread
Skinny jeans are in my future

Member since 6/06

10258 total posts

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Baby Momma

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

My son's pediatric Pulmonologist has no concerns at all with the two dogs we have at the house. he actually said that it will help him become more immune to pet allergens.Chat Icon

Posted 9/1/09 2:09 PM
 

Porrruss
Nya nya nya

Member since 5/05

11618 total posts

Name:
Amy

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

I suppose we are the exception to the rule. We had my cats for years before DD#1 was born. From the time she was 5 months old, she had a persistently red nose. At 9 months old, she was diagnosed with a cat allergy (through a skin test).

Due to her also having food allergies, it was suggested by our allergist we rehome our cats. Once they were rehomed, her red nose and congestion disappeared.

Interesting article though- wish like hell it held true for us.Chat Icon

Message edited 9/1/2009 2:51:37 PM.

Posted 9/1/09 2:51 PM
 

Gertyrae
Peace out Homies!

Member since 5/05

20046 total posts

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Gerty ®

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

I'm certainly hoping it works this way for us...so far DS has no problems with either the dog or cat (and the dog has even "kissed" him a couple times).

Posted 9/1/09 10:31 PM
 

GoldenRod
10 years on LIF!

Member since 11/06

26792 total posts

Name:
Shawn

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

Another study a few years ago said that it was dogs that increased the allergy resistance, but not cats....

I'm sure there will be another study soon that says only certain breeds of dogs, some cats, and hamsters....

Either way, they are all basically agreeing with each other, just varying on the specifics.

I grew up with dogs and cats, and so have DC and we have no allergies. DW grew up with cats and she also has no allergies.

Sis grew up with dogs and cats (obviously... Chat Icon ), and she has several cats now, but she has cat allergies.... go figure....

Posted 9/2/09 7:51 AM
 

MrsRivera
2 under 2...whew!!

Member since 2/07

9876 total posts

Name:
Beth

Re: Interesting Study: Pets Halt Allergies in Infants

This makes total sense to me. As one of the OP said, it seems that the more you are exposed to a potential allergen, the more your body will learn to tolerate it.

Hence the reason that I ate so many PB&J sandwiches when I was pregnant. So many other girls were staying away from PB and peanut products, but I thought it made total sense to expose her early and often!

Posted 9/5/09 12:32 PM
 
 

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