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The researches at Duke University in North Carolina found evidence
that may help to explain why people in
industrialized societies that greatly stress hygiene have higher rates
of allergy and autoimmune diseases than do people in less developed
societies in which hygiene is harder to achieve or considered less
critical.
The researchers published their
results early on-line in the Scandinavian Journal of Immunology. The
research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Duke
University School of Medicine and the Fannie E. Rippel Foundation.
The prevailing hypothesis concerning the
development of allergy and probably autoimmune disease is the "hygiene
hypothesis," which states that people in "hygienic" societies have
higher rates of allergy and perhaps autoimmune disease because they --
and hence their immune systems -- have not been as challenged during
everyday life by the host of microbes commonly found in the
environment.
The study suggests that an
overly hygienic environment could simultaneously increase the tendency
to have allergic reactions and the tendency to acquire autoimmune
disease, despite the fact that these two reactions represent two
different types of immune responses.
Up to 50 million Americans are
estimated to suffer from allergies, and another 8 million have some
form of autoimmune disorder, which occurs when an overactive immune
system attacks tissues in the body. Examples of autoimmune disorders
include lupus, insulin-dependant diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and
scleroderma.
"The most commonly accepted
explanation for this high incidence of allergy and perhaps autoimmune
disease is the hygiene hypothesis," Parker said. But this hypothesis
has not been thoroughly tested in animal studies, he said, and the few
studies conducted have focused on specific pathogens or parasites.
The Duke researchers decided to
study the hypothesis by comparing the immune systems of wild house mice
and common rats to laboratory mice and rats. For their experiments, the
researchers trapped wild rats in rural and urban settings in North
Carolina and trapped wild mice in Wisconsin. They then measured the
levels of antibodies in the blood of the wild rodents and compared the
levels to those observed in mice and rats housed in Duke animal
facilities.
"These results are consistent
with the idea that animals without access to modern medicine have high
levels of autoimmune-like and allergic-like immune responses that
represent appropriate responses to unknown factors in their
environment," he said.
Although this study suggests
that the environment plays an important role in how the immune systems
in animals develop, genetics is likely to be involved as well, Parker
said. He now is planning additional studies to help decipher the full
role of genetics.
Also, his group is planning
further studies of the hygiene hypothesis, using the new rodent model
to examine other factors that may be contributing to the higher rates
of allergy and autoimmune diseases of humans in industrialized
societies, such as lack of exercise, increased mental stress and the
consumption of processed food.
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