Scientists believe that knowing exactly which type of dirt provides the best ‘education’ for the immune system, could be key to providing new treatments for diseases such as asthma.
Speaking at the launch of the BA Festival of Science today, Professor Peter Openshaw, explains that a lack of exposure to dirt and common viral infections among children could be behind the rise in the levels of asthma.
Professor Openshaw, from Imperial College London, and based at St Mary’s Hospital, says: “Although we have seen a dramatic decline in many previously common childhood infections over the past 100 years, we have also seen a considerable rise in the prevalence of diseases such as asthma. The increase in asthma cannot be blamed purely on changes in genetic risk, so must be down to environmental factors.”
Scientists have called this the ‘hygiene’ hypothesis, with a lack of exposure to viruses and other environmental factors meaning children are not able to build up resistance, and can become more susceptible to disease later in life. They also believe having many older siblings, attending day care at an early age, or growing up on a farm can help in promoting resistance to disease.
Studies have shown that most common colds can help protect against wheezing in later childhood, and other childhood infections such as chickenpox also provide a level of protection.
Professor Openshaw adds: “The challenge now is to find ways of reproducing the protective effects of early childhood infections, while reducing the burden of actually getting these infectious diseases. Knowing exactly which ‘dirt’ provides the best education for the immune system, and how to mimic its affects in a cleaner environment, could be the key to reducing the rise in the prevalence of asthma and related diseases.”
Professor Openshaw is a respiratory medicine researcher, looking at immunological responses to diseases such as asthma, the common cold and other lung diseases.
Tony Stephenson | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: www.imperial.ac.uk
More articles from
Health and Medicine:
Does hormone treatment predispose patients to breast cancer?
21.11.2008 | CNRS (Délégation Paris Michel-Ange)
Mechanisms of cardiovascular disease and cancer give clues to new therapies
21.11.2008 | European Science Foundation
Sustainable garden roofs developed as a new construction material
21.11.2008 | Studies and Analyses
Bees declared the winners in Earthwatch’s ‘irreplaceable species’ battle
21.11.2008 | Ecology, The Environment and Conservation
Hairspray is linked to common genital birth defect
21.11.2008 | Studies and Analyses
The Automobile – The Transition from Energy Guzzler to Power Supplier
20.11.2008 | Event News
Ministers meet to define the role of space in delivering global objectives
18.11.2008 | Event News
156th Annual Acoustical Society of America (ASA) Meeting in Miami
28.10.2008 | Event News