Sept. 18, 2002 -- Behind the ongoing epidemic of allergy
and autoimmune disease there's a surprising culprit: cleanliness.
One of the hallmarks of the 20th century was its war on
germs. Kids now live in cleaner homes and suffer fewer infections than
their grandparents did. There's irony in this, according to the
so-called "hygiene" theory. It holds that a germ-free childhood warps
the immune system. This may lead not only to allergic diseases but also
to autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes and multiple sclerosis.
A report in the Sept. 19 issue of TheNew
England Journal of Medicine now offers powerful support for this
theory. The researchers carefully vacuumed up dust from the beds of 812
children from rural areas of Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. The dust
was measured for a basic component of dirt -- the outer cell wall of
common bacteria, known to scientists as endotoxin. Also collected were
the kids' medical records.
The result: the kids who had the cleanest mattresses had
the most hay fever, allergic asthma, and allergic reactions. The kids
with the dirtiest beds -- and least allergy and asthma -- were most
likely to live or play on farms. That's no surprise, as earlier studies
showed that children raised on farms have fewer allergies and less
asthma than rural kids who don't live on farms. Bacteria excreted by
cows and other farm animals are the most common source of endotoxin.
These findings support previous research showing that
having a cat or a dog in the home as a child or attending day care
during the first year of life helps prevent the development of allergies
and asthma in kids.
"Farm kids just have a natural environment, and this suggests
that if you have natural exposure to endotoxin, it is helpful," study leader
Charlotte Braun-Fahrländer, MD, tells WebMD. "So should I have a pig in my
garden? No. And this kind of study does not let us say that it would be helpful
for your children to spend their holidays on a farm. It would be a nice, restful
vacation. But I can't say for sure it would help the children be more healthy."
For the immune system to develop normally, it needs constant
stimulation from the environment, says pediatric allergist Andrew H. Liu, MD,
director of the training program at National Jewish Medical and Research Center
in Denver.
"Allergies are a sort of deranged immune memory," Liu tells
WebMD. "If you look at people who are not allergic, their immune systems are
reacting to the same things as people with allergies. They just remember to
react in a way that does not cause allergic disease. So it seems that seeing a
lot of things in the environment at an early age steers the immune system away
from this type of deranged memory."
There are two sides to this coin, warns Braun-Fahrländer,
professor and vice-chairwoman of the Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine
at the University of Basel in Switzerland.
"We have a very hygienic environment and we fear contact with
dirt, but it doesn't only harm us -- it helps our immune system," she says. "On
the other hand, we have to be prudent because of course some [bacteria] have
negative effects."
It's too soon to advise people to eat dirt or to move to a farm,
says asthma expert Scott T. Weiss, MD, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical
School. Weiss' editorial accompanies the Braun-Fahrländer study.
"I think it would be a little too simple to say that how you
clean your house is the issue here," Weiss tells WebMD. "Nobody recommends
keeping a pig or cow in the house. Whether you use Lysol or not isn't going to
significantly influence endotoxin levels. This study is a small step in a line
of reasoning saying that exposures to bacteria and infections are important in
developing a healthy immune system."
This line of reasoning suggests that allergies may be just the
tip of the iceberg, according to another NEJM article by Jean-François
Bach, MD, DSc, director of the INSERM immunology unit at Necker Hospital in
Paris. Bach suggests that improvements in public health that expose children to
fewer infections increase their risk of autoimmune diseases such as type 1
diabetes, multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease, and perhaps even non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma.
Bach says that as the immune system develops in a child, it
needs fine-tuning. Every time it fights a germ, it learns a little more.
Eventually it learns the best way to fight germs and how not to start allergic
or autoimmune reactions.
Parents should continue to protect their children from
infections, Bach says. But he warns that overprotection -- especially by
unneeded antibiotic treatments -- can kill off harmless bacteria that have much
to teach the immune system.
"I think the first thing is not to worry if a child has a piece
of meat falling on the ground and eats it," Bach tells WebMD. "Exposure to some
minor infections is not bad. You don't need to sterilize and resterilize
everything. The main thing is to avoid unnecessary antibiotic therapy."
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-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
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