Correlations Between Allergic and Infectious Diseases – Results of the Latest German National Health Survey (NHS98) and the German Health Interview and Examination Survey for Children and Adolescents (KiGGS)

U. Langen, J. Röhmel
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

In the literature, according to the hygiene hypothesis, infections should be expected to correlate with fewer al- lergies. However, several studies clearly show that infections - especially infections of the upper respiratory tract - and surrogate parameters such as the use of antibiotics or paracetamol correlate with a higher rate of allergies. This article re- views the literature (50 articles are analyzed) on possible connections between infections and allergies and offers some possible explanations. Original data from population-based health interviews and examination surveys of adults, children and adolescents are added. These data show a clear correlation between most infections and an enhanced allergy rate. Nevertheless, although the correlastions obtained seem intriguing, it has to be kept in mind, that no clear direction of the correlations can be stated since the database does not allow for such interpretation. So, the data do not necessarily add to the picture of the hygiene hypothesis, as the infections could have followed the allergies. The probability of suffering from an allergy rises with the number of infections (or vice versa) a person has had (e.g. the risk for adults of developing asthma is enhanced to 1.3 CI-95% 1.2-1.4 with enhanced numbers of former infections with pertussis, chickenpox, scarlet fever, dysentery or typhoid/paratyphoid). This applies especially to pertussis (e.g. 15.8% CI-95% 13.6-18.3% of children with hayfever had pertussis versus 7.6% CI-95% 6.9-8.3% of the healthy children) and chickenpox infections (e.g. 84.7% CI-95% 82.7-86.6% of children with hayfever had chickenpox versus 66.8% CI-95% 65.8-67.8% of the healthy children), both of which are preventable by vaccination.
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过敏性疾病与传染性疾病的相关性——最新的德国国家健康调查(NHS98)和德国儿童和青少年健康访谈和检查调查(KiGGS)的结果
在文献中,根据卫生假说,感染应该与较少的过敏相关。然而,一些研究清楚地表明,感染——尤其是上呼吸道感染——和替代参数(如抗生素或扑热息痛的使用)与较高的过敏率相关。本文回顾了有关感染和过敏之间可能联系的文献(分析了50篇文章),并提供了一些可能的解释。加入了基于人口的健康访谈和成人、儿童和青少年体检调查的原始数据。这些数据表明,大多数感染与过敏率增加之间存在明显的相关性。然而,尽管获得的相关性看起来很有趣,但必须记住,由于数据库不允许这样的解释,因此无法说明相关性的明确方向。因此,这些数据并不一定能支持卫生假说,因为感染可能是在过敏之后发生的。一个人患过敏的可能性随着感染次数的增加而增加(反之亦然)(例如,随着以前感染百日咳、水痘、猩红热、痢疾或伤寒/副伤寒次数的增加,成人患哮喘的风险增加到1.3 CI-95% 1.2-1.4)。这尤其适用于百日咳(例如,15.8% CI-95% 13.6-18.3%的百日咳患儿患百日咳,而健康儿童为7.6% CI-95% 6.9-8.3%)和水痘感染(例如,84.7% CI-95% 82.7% -86.6%的枯草热患儿患水痘,而健康儿童为66.8% CI-95% 65.8-67.8%),这两种疾病均可通过接种疫苗预防。
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