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Re: H pylori infection protects against asthma via Treg upregulation

by Taka <taka0038@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Aug 7, 2008 at 06:16 PM

On Aug 7, 5:57 pm, Fran=C3=A7ois Rose <fr.r...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Aug 7, 8:13 am, Kofi <k...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>
>
> > <http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080715071419.htm>
>
> > Science News
>
> >  Share    Blog    Cite
> >  Print    Email    Bookmark
>
> > Stomach Bug Appears To Protect Kids From Asthma, Says New Study
> > ScienceDaily (July 20, 2008) =E2=80=B9 A long-time microbial
inhabitant=
 of the
> > human stomach may protect children from developing asthma, according
to
> > a new study among more than 7,000 subjects led by NYU Langone Medical
> > Center researchers. Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium that has
co-existe=
d
> > with humans for at least 50,000 years, may lead to peptic ulcers and
> > stomach cancer. Yet, kids between the ages of 3 and 13 are nearly 59
> > percent less likely to have asthma if they carry the bug, the
> > researchers re****t.
>
> > The study appears in the July 15, 2008, online issue of The Journal of
> > Infectious Diseases.
>
> > "Our findings suggest that absence of H. pylori may be one explanation
> > for the increased risk of childhood asthma," says Yu Chen, Ph.D.,
> > assistant professor of epidemiology at New York University School of
> > Medicine and a co-author of the study. "Among teens and children ages
3
> > to 19 years, carriers of H. pylori were 25 percent less likely to have
> > asthma."
>
> > The impact was even more potent among children ages 3 to 13: they were
> > 59 percent less likely to have asthma if they carried the bacterium,
th=
e
> > researchers re****t. H. pylori carriers in teens and children were also
> > 40 percent less likely to have hay fever and associated allergies such
> > as eczema or rash.
>
> > These results, which follow on from similar findings in adults
publishe=
d
> > by the same authors last year, are based on an analysis of data
gathere=
d
> > from 7,412 participants in the fourth National Health and Nutrition
> > Survey (NHANES IV) conducted from 1999 to 2000 by the National Center
> > for Health Statistics.
> > Dr. Chen collaborated on the survey with Martin J. Blaser, M.D., the
> > Frederick H. King Professor of Internal Medicine, chair of the
> > department of medicine, and professor of microbiology at NYU Langone
> > Medical Center. Dr. Blaser has studied H. pylori for more than two
> > decades.
>
> > Asthma has been rising steadily for the past half-century. Meanwhile
H.
> > pylori, once nearly universal in humans, has been slowly disappearing
> > from developed countries over the past century due to increased
> > antibiotic use, which kills off the bacteria, and cleaner water and
> > homes, explains Dr. Blaser. Data from NHANES IV showed that only 5.4
> > percent of children born in the 1990s were positive for H. pylori, and
> > that 11.3 percent of the participants under 10 had received an
> > antibiotic in the month prior to the survey.
>
> > The rise in asthma over the past decades, Dr. Blaser says, could stem
> > from the fact that a stomach harboring H. pylori has a different
> > immunological status from one lacking the bug. When H. pylori is
> > present, the stomach is lined with immune cells called regulatory T
> > cells that control the body's response to invaders. Without these
cells=
,
> > a child can be more sensitive to allergens.
> > "Our hypothesis is that if you have Helicobacter you have a greater
> > population of regulatory T-cells that are setting a higher threshold
fo=
r
> > sensitization," Dr. Blaser explains. "For example, if a child doesn't
> > have Helicobacter and has contact with two or three cockroaches, he
may
> > get sensitized to them. But if Helicobacter is directing the immune
> > response, then even if a child comes into contact with many
cockroaches
> > he may not get sensitized because his immune system is more tolerant."
>
> > In other words, the presence of the bacteria in the stomach may
> > influence how a child's immune system develops: if a child does not
> > encounter Helicobacter early on, the immune system may not learn how
to
> > regulate a response to allergens. Therefore, the child may be more
> > likely to mount the kinds of inflammatory responses that trigger
asthma=
..
>
> > "There's a growing body of data that says that early life use of
> > antibiotics increases risk of asthma, and parents and doctors are
using
> > antibiotics like water," Dr. Blaser says. "The reality is that
> > Helicobacter is disappearing extremely rapidly. In the NHANES IV
study,
> > less than six percent of U.S. children had Helicobacter, and probably
> > two generations ago it was 70 percent. So, this is a huge change in
> > human micro-ecology. The disappearance of an organism that's been in
th=
e
> > stomach forever and is dominant is likely to have consequences. The
> > consequences may be both good--less likelihood of gastric cancer and
> > ulcers later in life--and bad: more asthma early in life."
>
> >
-----------------------------------------------------------------------=
-
> > Adapted from materials provided by NYU Langone Medical Center / New
Yor=
k
> > University School of Medicine.
>
> > Need to cite this story in your essay, paper, or re****t? Use one of
the
> > following formats:
>
> >  APA
> >  MLA
>
> Hi Kofi.
>
> There are, however, potential dangers in H. Pylori
> The two that I'm aware are peptic ulcer (that my wife suffered) and
> gastric cancer: see below
>
> From the abstract ofhttp://pmid.us/15106235
> "REVIEWERS' CONCLUSIONS: Treatment of H. pylori infection is more
> effective than antisecretory non-eradicating therapy (with or without
> long-term maintenance antisecretory therapy) in preventing recurrent
> bleeding from peptic ulcer. Consequently, all patients with peptic
> ulcer bleeding should be tested for H. pylori infection, and
> eradication therapy should be prescribed to H. pylori-positive
> patients."
>
> From the free full text ofhttp://pmid.us/17589938
>
> "H PYLORI INFECTION AND GC [Gastric Cancer]  RISK
>
> Since the incidental discovery in 1983, the association of H pylori
> with GC has become a hot topic of gastroenterological studies. Just a
> decade later, a large cross-sectional study (the EUROGAST study)
> involving 17 populations from 13 different countries (Unites States,
> Japan and 11 European countries), concluded that H pylori-infected
> patients had six-fold increased risk of GC compared with uninfected
> subjects[72]. In 1994, despite some controversial opinion, the
> International Agency for Research on Cancer declared H pylori to be a
> group=E2=85=A0human carcinogen for gastric adenocarcinoma[73]. The
statem=
ent
> was mainly based on epidemiological investigations since no
> experimental studies had been performed at that time to prove the
> causal link between H pylori and GC. Currently, although substantial
> evidence sup****ts the role of H pylori infection in GC development,
> the magnitude of the risk of GC associated with infection remains
> unclear.
> <big snip>
>
> However, the most powerful evidence comes from a prospective study on
> 1526 Japanese patients followed for approximately 7.8 years. GC
> developed in 36 out of 1246 H pylori-positive patients (2.9%) in
> contrast to none of the 280 non-infected subjects[146]."
>
> Fran=C3=A7ois Rose

Japanese do have higher occurrence of H. pylori and stomach cancer.
They also have higher consumption of Omega-3 and other PUFAs
generally.  If this was a politically correct view, the "experts"
could call it a correlation or even causation ...  I would call this
"how stressy conditions can turn symbiont into a pathogenic bug".

Taka
 




 3 Posts in Topic:
H pylori infection protects against asthma via Treg upregulation
Kofi <kofi@[EMAIL PROT  2008-08-07 01:13:58 
Re: H pylori infection protects against asthma via Treg upregula
=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Fran=E7ois  2008-08-07 01:57:28 
Re: H pylori infection protects against asthma via Treg upregula
Taka <taka0038@[EMAIL   2008-08-07 18:16:28 

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