Four Gut Bacteria Decrease Asthma Risk in Infants

Research supports the hygiene hypothesis that we’re making our environment too clean

Written byUniversity of British Columbia
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New research by scientists at the University of British Columbia and BC Children’s Hospital finds that infants can be protected from getting asthma if they acquire four types of gut bacteria by three months of age. More than 300 families from across Canada participated in this research through the Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development (CHILD) Study.

“This research supports the hygiene hypothesis that we’re making our environment too clean. It shows that gut bacteria play a role in asthma, but it is early in life when the baby’s immune system is being established,” said the study’s co-lead researcher B. Brett Finlay, Peter Wall Distinguished Professor in the Michael Smith Laboratories and the departments of microbiology & immunology and biochemistry and molecular biology at UBC.

Related article: Probiotic Formula Reverses Cow’s Milk Allergies by Changing Gut Bacteria of Infants

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