Breast-Feeding Reduces The Risk Of Asthma During The First 4 Years Of Life

breast feeding allergy asthma
The protective effect of breast-feeding on asthma and allergy has been debated for more than 60 years without any hope of a consensus. A major problem is the lack of randomized controlled trials. However, breast-feeding has a number of other benefits and should be recommended irrespective of any effect on asthma or allergy. This is why randomized trials are not considered ethical. Thus, we have to rely on observational studies, which have produced conflicting results. Mothers who do or do not breastfeed differ in several environmental exposures, including socio-economic class, smoking and area of living, which influence indoor and outdoor exposure to pollutants. Despite statistical adjustment for these confounding factors, the evidence is never as robust as it would be with an randomized controlled trial. (more…)

Prenatal Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE) And Asthma In Children

The prevalence of asthma increases with increasing levels of Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE). However, the effect of early-life exposure, the fundamental window of exposure, is unknown. The investigators assessed the association of prenatal exposure to DDE and other organochlorine compounds with atopy and asthma during infancy. All women presenting for antenatal care in Menorca (Spain) over 12 months starting in mid-1997 were invited to take part in a longitudinal study; 482 children were subsequently enrolled and 468 (97.1%) provided complete outcome data up to the 4th year of the study. (more…)