Antibiotics during pregnancy may lead to asthma in children

style="float: right; margin-bottom: 10px; font-weight: 600;"Sun 19th May, 2013

(Reuters) - According to a Danish study, children whose mothers took antibiotics while they were pregnant are slightly more likely than other children to develop asthma. There is however, no proof that antibiotics cause the higher asthma risk.
The results support a current theory that the body's own "friendly" bacteria have a role in whether a child develops asthma or not. Antibiotics tend to disrupt beneficial bacteria.


According to Hans Bisgaard, one of the study's authors and a professor at the University of Copenhagen, it is speculated that mothers' use of antibiotics changes the balance of natural bacteria, which is transmitted to the newborn. Unbalanced bacteria in early life may then impact on the immune maturation in the newborn.
Previous research has linked antibiotics taken during infancy to a higher risk of asthma, although some researchers have disputed those findings.
To look for effects starting at an even earlier point, Bisgaard and his colleagues gathered information from a Danish national birth database of more than 30,000 children born between 1997 and 2003, and followed for five years.
They found that about 7,300 of the children, or nearly one quarter, were exposed to antibiotics while their mothers were pregnant. Among them, just over three percent, 238 children, were hospitalized for asthma by age five.
The study, which appeared in The Journal of Pediatrics, found that by contrast, about 2.5 percent, or 581 of some 23,000 children whose mothers didn't take antibiotics, were hospitalized with asthma.
After taking into account other asthma risk factors, Bisgaard's team calculated that the children who had been exposed to antibiotics were 17 percent more likely to be hospitalized for asthma.
Similarly, these children were also 18 percent more likely to have been given a prescription for an asthma medication than children whose mothers did not take antibiotics when they were pregnant.
His team also looked at a smaller group of 411 children who were at higher risk for asthma because their mothers had the condition. They found that these children were twice as likely as their peers to develop asthma too if their mothers took antibiotics during the third trimester of pregnancy.
Others said that it was possible that something besides the antibiotics was responsible, such as the illness the drugs were prescribed for.


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