A newly released study reported
in the journal Clinical & Experimental Allergy reveals that keeping a dog
or cat in the home does not increase children's risk of becoming allergic to
the pets.
Parents of young children
frequently want to know whether keeping a dog or cat in their home will
increase the risk of their children becoming allergic to their pets.
Led by Ganesa Wegienka, MS,
PhD, of the Department of Public Health Sciences, Henry Ford Hospital, and
scientists followed a group of children from birth until they reached
adulthood. Periodic contact was made with the parents and the children to
collect information about exposure to cats and dogs.
At age 18 years, 565 study
participants supplied blood samples to the researchers, who measured antibodies
to dog and cat allergens in the samples.
Results observed that being
exposed to the specific animal in the first year of life was the most important
exposure period, and the exposure appeared protective in some groups.
Young men whose families had
kept an indoor dog during their first year of life had about half the risk of
becoming sensitized to dogs in comparison to those whose families did not keep
a dog in the first year of life.
Both men and women were about
half as likely to be sensitized to cats if they had lived with a cat in the
first year of life, in comparison to those who did not live with cats.
"This research provides
further evidence that experiences in the first year of life are linked to
health status during the later part of life, and that early life pet exposure
does not put most children at risk of being sensitized to these animals during
the later part of life," Wegienka concludes.
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