| A new study just published in the Journal
of Clinical and Experimental Allergy has added fuel to the concern over the
indiscriminate use of antibiotics. It has also begun to address the recent concern of
scientists about the increasing occurrences of asthma in the United States.
The researchers surveyed parents of grade-school age children attending the Rudolf
Steiner schools in New Zealand. These six schools were chosen because the schools
philosophy of illness causes it to "include a significant portion of parents who have
rejected the use of conventional treatments, including antibiotics.
A survey was sent to the parents of 612 students, of which 456 (75%) were completed and
returned. The survey was based on questions from the International Study on Asthma and
Allergies in Children (ISAAC).
The history of the children revealed:
Antibiotic Use (ever)
74.7%
Antibiotic Use
36.3%
(first year of life)
Any Vaccinations
75.5%
Ever Had Asthma
.. 15.8%
The study looked at the odds ratio (risk) of children experiencing asthma symptoms
based upon if, when, and how often they had taken antibiotics. The most decisive factors
were when ( before or after the first year of life ) and how often. The results are quite
sobering:
Increased risk of asthma symptoms over those
children that have never taken antibiotics
| An "odds ratio" of 1.0 means the likelihood of a particular
event occurring is equivalent whether a child has taken antibiotics. Thus, a child given
antibiotics during the first year of life has an odds ratio of 4.05, which means the child
is over four times more likely to develop asthma symptoms that the child who has never
taken antibiotics. |
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All of these odds ratios are adjusted for confounding factors of gender,
ethnicity, family size, family history of asthma and parents smoking habits. Without
accounting for the cofounders, the odds ratios are as much as six times the risk
experienced by children who have never taken antibiotics.
So, now childhood asthma is added to the list of potential hazards to taking
antibiotics. This, along with the increase n antibiotic resistance, should cause patients
to think twice about taking antibiotics, particularly where not specifically required.
Parents, (and future parents) should be immediately made aware of this potential risk.
For information about how this obtain a complete copy of this paper, please see the
information at the bottom of page three in this issue.
Julian Crane, associate professor at Otago University and one of the studys
investigators, adds a note of caution about the findings: "Our paper, together with a
study published last year in Thorax (Farooqi IS, et al. Thorax 1998;53:927-32),
raises the possibility that broad-spectrum antibiotics, particularly in the first year of
life, may be associated with an increased risk of atopy and asthma. For reasons that have
been pointed out in both papers, these results cannot be taken as definitive, but rather
as hypothesis raising.
"On the other hand, the results are plausible. Broad spectrum antibiotics came
into clinical usage in the 1960s and their increased use coincides with the time trends
for the increasing prevalence of asthma. There is a plausible mechanism, namely that
broad-spectrum antibiotics mat alter and reduce bowel flora and thus switch off the
immunological signals that these gut bacteria send to the developing immune system.
"Much more work needs to be done to check out whether this effect is
casual, and if so, what are the immunological processes that cause it ," professor
Crane concluded.
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