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Release Date: 00:01, Tuesday 22 August 2000 UK Time
Contact: Kay Prior
+44
0207 890 6296
Changes in Diet Related to Prevalence of Asthma and Allergies
Childhood diet may be critical to the development of asthma and allergies, reports a
study in Thorax.
The research focused on communities in Saudi Arabia where there are striking
differences in lifestyle and rates of allergies across the country. More than 100
children, drawn from Jeddah and several rural villages, and with symptoms of asthma and
wheeze, were compared with 200 non-asthmatic children. Their average age was 12.
Family history, allergic tendencies and a poor diet were significantly associated with
wheeze in the children with symptoms. When dietary components were broken down further,
and the data analyzed more extensively, those children who had the lowest intakes of
vegetables and milk, vitamin E, and certain minerals were at significantly greater risk of
wheeze, even after adjusting for other factors. Children, whose diets were relatively low
in vegetables and vitamin E intake, were around three times as likely to suffer wheeze.
Family size, numbers of infections, level of affluence, and parental smoking, all of
which are considered to be risk factors for asthma, were not associated with wheeze, the
research showed.
As prosperity has increased in Saudi Arabia over the past 30 years, so has the tendency
toward a Western diet, say the authors, a trend that is more marked in urban areas. Poor
diet is likely to be an important risk factor for asthma and allergies, they conclude. And
a change in diet may therefore largely explain the increase in prevalence of these
conditions in developed countries.
Contact: Professor Anthony Seaton, Department of Environmental and Occupational
Medicine, University of Aberdeen, Scotland. Tel: Friday to Sunday home telephone number
available from BMA Press Office; Monday: c/o Mrs. Kay Prior at the Department of
Environment, London: 0207 890 6296; Tuesday 01224 558 196; e-mail: a.seaton@abdn.ac.uk.
[Diet and childhood asthma in a society in transition: A study in urban and rural Saudi
Arabia. Thorax, 2000; 55: 775-9]
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