High pollen exposure in the last three months of pregnancy significantly
increases a baby's risk of serious asthma attacks, research has shown. A
Swedish study of more than 110,000 pregnancies found that high pollen count was
associated with a 35 per cent increased risk of infants being taken to hospital
because of asthma. Exposure to high pollen levels during the first three months
of life appeared to reduce the risk, but only among children of heavy-smoking
mothers.
Pregnant women exposed to high levels of pollens in the three months before they gave birth had children with a higher asthma risk. Yet infants exposed in the first three months of life had a reduced risk
Scientists checked pollen levels in central Stockholm and matched the
results with medical records. Pollen comes from grass, trees and flowers.
Counts can vary markedly season-to-season and year-to-year but are highest from
late spring to early autumn. For each child, pollen count was assessed during
the first and last 12 weeks of pregnancy, as well as the first 12 weeks of
life.
Researchers took account of a range of factors that could have swayed
the results, including mothers' smoking habits, infant gender, stage of pregnancy
at birth, and season of birth. The findings are reported today in the journal
Allergy, Asthma and Clinical Immunology. A number of possible reasons for the
association are given. Women with allergies may have reactions to pollen that
affect the unborn baby's environment and affect immune system development, say
the researchers. It is also possible that pregnant women with severe reactions
to pollen suffer complications that affect the child, it is claimed.
The scientists, led by Dr Adrian Lowe, from the University of Umea,
wrote: 'It is likely that pollen sensitised mothers exposed to high levels of
pollen during pregnancy are at increased risk of symptoms and asthma
exacerbations. This may in turn change the intrauterine environment. 'Alternatively,
symptomatic mothers during high pollen periods may have an increased risk of
pregnancy complications, including pre-eclampsia, pre-term birth and impaired
foetal growth, which could influence the risk of wheezing illness. 'Further
work is required to elucidate exactly how pollen exposure may prime the foetal
immune system towards severe respiratory illness in early life.'
Source: Daily Mail UK
No comments:
Post a Comment