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No Cats, No Allergies? Experts Say Maybe Not...

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With allergies and asthma on the rise, many parents, especially those with young children who have a high risk of allergies, wonder whether owning a pet can raise their child's risk even more. At the Congress of the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology in Warsaw, Poland, this week, world leaders in allergy are debating the same question, but they've taken the question one step further: They're also asking if having pets early in life can actually protect against allergies.


Here are some answers to your questions on both sides of the allergy debate.


Will owning a cat increase my child's risk of developing allergies?


The good news for pet lovers is that two meta analyses that were presented at the conference found that owning a pet in the first two years of life did not increase a child's risk of allergy or asthma.

However studies have found conflicting results, with some showing protection and others showing increased risk. Adnan Custovic, M.D., professor of allergy at the University of Manchester, in England, has been researching genetic predispositions to allergies.

There appear to be many factors that affect your risk of allergies--your phenotype (genetic profile), the age of exposure to allergens, how much exposure you get (the dander of five cats versus that of one cat) and even what other allergens are present, like dust mites and mold. "Some people may benefit from having a cat or dog, but some may be hurt," Custovic said.


What about the opposite? Could owning a cat actually protect my child from developing allergies?


Experts used to believe that early avoidance of all allergens was key, but solid studies have found that having a too-clean environment may help some people but hurt the majority of people. That's because being exposed to microbes and bacteria is thought to help in the normal development of the immune system.

When it comes to owning a cat, some studies suggests that exposure to allergens early in life can help you build up a tolerance to them. "The classic concept was to take away the cat, but in the last five years there's been a change in paradigm as we realized that eliminating exposure resulted in very little long lasting protection," says Ulrich Wahn, M.D., professor of pediatric allergy at the Charité University in Berlin.


So...should I get rid of my cat?


The evidence isn't strong enough yet to recommend for or against having pets, so there's no reason to get rid of your cat -- unless your child has already been diagnosed with cat allergies.


Laurie Tarkan is a health reporter covering the Congress of the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology in Warsaw, Poland. She writes for the New York Times and national magazines, and is the author of two books on pregnancy and infertility. She has recently launched her own allergy blog


 

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1 Comments

Mel Kotlyar said:

Thanks for the article. Here is another interesting view point on how allergies are formed and how to alleviate the symptoms.

Our immune system is a reflection of our unconscious minds. It is now proposed that many allergic reactions may have a fundamentally psychological cause.

According to immunologist Dr. Michael Levi, an allergy is like a "phobia" of the immune system. In the 1950’s Levi won the World Health Association Award for his research demonstrating that viruses were infectious. As a result of his many years of work with the immune system, Levi contends that, when a person develops an allergy, the immune system has in essence formed a kind of phobic reaction to a certain type of substance, and then begins to panic when it gets around it.

Symptoms of an allergy are produced by the results of this type of phobic reaction. Levi also asserts that other forms of allergies are like a "tantrum" of the immune system -- that is, the immune system is throwing some sort of fit because it was not being taken care of properly, or was getting so fatigued and tired that it was striking out as a person or a child might have a tantrum.

In the same way that we learn and acquire emotional responses, our bodies learn and acquire immune responses. The fact that such deadly illnesses as small pox and polio have been virtually wiped off the face of the earth is a testament to the fact that our immune systems can learn.

The major issue in dealing with an allergy is reeducating the immune system. Our immune system has two basic ways of dealing with foreign material in our bodies - passive and active. A passive immune response is primarily carried out by macrophages - white cells in the blood stream that simply engulf and digest the foreign material. In fact, the term "macrophage" literally means "big eater." The active immune response is carried out by "killer" T cells - cells that attack and destroy foreign matter.

It is possible for example for someone to trigger an immune response psychologically and unconsciously as a way of escaping from a stressful situation or occupation. The process is unconscious and may be one of our fundamental "survival" systems. It is our unconscious mind's way of telling us to avoid a situation.

Hypnotherapy can progressively undo this learnt pattern (not suitable for eg nut allergies) and remove the conditioned immune response.

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