The Free Press Journal

Not just genetics, gut bacteria may lead to asthma in babies

-

The family risk for asthma – typically passed from mothers to babies – may not be a result of genetics alone. Researcher­s have found that microbes in a baby’s digestive tract may also be involved.

The finding, published in the European Respirator­y Journal, suggests that modifying the infant gut microbiome – the community of microorgan­isms or bacteria that live in the digestive tracts – could reduce their risk of developing asthma.

In the study, the researcher­s found that baby boys born to pregnant mothers with asthma – who are typically at the highest risk for developing asthma in early childhood – were also one-third as likely to have a gut microbiome with specific characteri­stics at three to four months of age.

“We saw a significan­t reduction in the family of microbes called Lactobacil­lus in Caucasian baby boys born to pregnant women who had asthma, and this was especially evident if the asthmatic mother had allergies or was overweight,” said senior author of the study Anita Kozyrskyj from University of Alberta in Canada.

These findings provide the first evidence that maternal asthma during pregnancy may be associated with changes in an infant’s gut microbes, Kozyrskyj said. “Our discovery, with more research, could eventually lead to a preventati­ve approach involving modifying the gut microbiome in infants to reduce the risk,” she explained.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India