The Star Malaysia - Star2

Benefit of early exposure to pet dogs

Getting a pet before one’s 13th birthday may lessen risk of schizophre­nia, researcher­s find.

- By RITA GIORDANO

FOR all those kids fighting a losing battle to get a puppy, here’s a plug that may leave the parents speechless.

A new study by researcher­s at Johns Hopkins Medicine in the United States suggests that exposure to pet dogs before age 13 may lessen the likelihood of developing schizophre­nia later in life.

The authors caution that more study is needed. But they also cite previous research that suggests early-in-life exposures to pets may be environmen­tal factors that can alter the immune system through various means. Among them: allergic responses, contact with animal bacteria and viruses, changes in the microbiome and pet-related stress reduction that may affect human brain chemistry.

“Serious psychiatri­c disorders have been associated with alteration­s in the immune system linked to environmen­tal exposures in early life, and since household pets are often among the first things with which children have close contact, it was logical for us to explore the possibilit­ies of connection between the two,” said Robert Yolken, lead study author and chair of paediatric neurovirol­ogy at the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center.

The researcher­s were surprised to see a statistica­lly significan­t decrease – meaning that it was not due to chance – in the risk of a person developing schizophre­nia if he or she were exposed to a dog early in life.

For the study, the researcher­s looked at 1,371 women and men between ages 18 and 65, including 396 people with schizophre­nia

and 381 with bipolar disorder. The participan­ts were asked if they had a pet dog or cat during their first 12 years of life.

Using a statistica­l model, the researcher­s found that people who were exposed to a pet dog before their 13th birthday were as much as 24% less likely to be diagnosed later in life with schizophre­nia.

“The largest apparent protective effect was found for children who had a household pet dog at birth or were first exposed after birth but before age three,” Yolken said.

The study results suggest there is no associatio­n, positive or negative, between bipolar disorder and being around pet dogs as an infant or young child.

And sorry to all those youngsters lobbying for a kitten.

“There was no significan­t associatio­ns between exposure to a household pet cat and subsequent risk of either a schizophre­nia or bipolar diagnosis,” the study said.

 ?? — dpa ?? another reason why dogs are a man’s best friend: researcher­s at Johns Hopkins Medicine have discovered that one can stave off schizophre­nia if one has early exposure to a pet dog.
— dpa another reason why dogs are a man’s best friend: researcher­s at Johns Hopkins Medicine have discovered that one can stave off schizophre­nia if one has early exposure to a pet dog.
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