Daily Mail

C-section babies ‘at more risk of food allergies’

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

CHILDREN born by caesarean section are more likely to suffer from food allergies than those born naturally, according to research.

The increase in allergies was present in both elective and emergency C-sections. The researcher­s said an extra five children in every 1,000 born by caesarean were being diagnosed with a food allergy compared to those born without surgery.

Food allergies, which can be fatal in extreme cases, are becoming more common – and the authors suggest that the increase in C-sections may be contributi­ng to this. They estimate that the procedure could be the reason for an extra 17 per cent of children with food allergies.

The reason is not known but researcher­s suggest the guts of babies born by C-sections are colonised by clostridiu­m difficile bacteria, rather than those present in the mother’s birth canal. This bug – which is resistant to many antibiotic­s – may disrupt the developmen­t of the gut. Ordinarily it would be ‘crowded out’ by a mother’s

‘Gut bacteria may be disrupted’

own natural bacteria. The study – by a team from Stockholm University and published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology – was based on records of more than one million children born in Sweden between 2001 and 2012.

The authors based their findings of food allergies on medical diagnosis and suggest that their research may underestim­ate the number, as it does not take into account mild cases that may not have been identified by doctors.

Food allergies in the UK are on the rise: one study found UK hospital admissions for food allergy-related illnesses rose by 500 per cent between 1990 and 2007.

They can also can be fatal. In the UK around ten people every year die of anaphylact­ic shock caused by eating something to which they are highly allergic.

The prevalence of C- sections is also rising. There were 73,551 elective C-sections in 2015-16, a rise of 6,750 compared to 2011-12. Emergency procedures rose from 97,054 to 99,403 over the same period.

Previous research found that clostridiu­m difficile bacteria is commonly found in the intestines of babies born by caesarean.

Babies born ‘naturally’ get their first gut bacteria from their mothers in the birth canal while C- section babies are first exposed to bacteria in the delivery room.

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