City
Epaper

Heavier babies more likely to develop childhood allergies

By IANS | Updated: October 16, 2019 14:40 IST

Parents, take note. Researchers have found that heavier babies are more likely to suffer childhood food allergies or eczema.

Open in App

For the study, published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, the research team carried out a systematic review assessing past studies in humans.

After screening more than 15,000 studies, they identified 42 that included data on more than two million allergy sufferers.

"We analysed the associations between birth weight, corrected for gestational age, and the incidence of allergic diseases in children and adults," said Kathy Gatford from the University of Adelaide in Australia.

"For each kilogram increase in birth weight there was a 44 per cent increase in the risk that a child had food allergies or a 17 per cent increase in the risk that they had eczema," Gatford said.

According to the researchers, they analysed studies that included over 2.1 million people affected by allergic dermatitis, commonly known as eczema, nearly 70,000 people affected by food allergies and over 100,000 people with allergic rhinitis or hay fever.

Most of the studies were in children from developed countries and most were European.

"Allergic diseases including eczema, hay fever, food allergies, anaphylaxis and asthma are estimated to affect 30-40 per cent of the world's population," Gatford said..

"It is increasingly clear that genetics alone do not explain risks of developing allergies, and that environmental exposures before and around birth can programme individuals to increased or decreased risk of allergies," Gatford added.

Most of the allergies in these studies were assessed in young children.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: The University Of AdelaideIansaustralia
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalAliens in Australia? Senator Ralph Babet Claims ‘Alien-Human Hybrids’ Living Among Humans

InternationalTropical Cyclone Narelle: Australian Skies Turned Blood-Red Due to Cyclonic Storm? Here's What Happened

InternationalAustralia: 3 Killed, 4 Injured in Shooting at Lake Cargelligo in New South Wales; Police Ask Residents to Stay Indoors

CricketDamien Martyn: Former Australia World Cup Winner Hospitalised in Induced Coma

InternationalBondi Beach Shooting: Gunmen Identified as Father-Son; 16 Killed at Jewish Celebration in Sydney

स्वास्थ्य Realted Stories

HealthIndia to boost biosimilar insulin, CGM manufacturing as Global South looks for support

HealthIndia clocks unprecedented foodgrain output, boosts institutional support to farmers

HealthIndia tightens watch on GLP-1 drugs amid safety and misuse concerns

HealthIndia’s millet push receives dual boost at technology and grassroots levels

HealthUK heart rhythm expert now performing procedures in India