Respiratory Problems Linked to Early Fungus Exposure
By Jean Lerche Davis
WebMD Medical News Archive
July 17, 2003
Babies growing up in damp homes where mold and mildew are present develop
more respiratory illnesses such as croup, pneumonia, and bronchitis.
The finding appears in the July issue of the American Journal of Respiratory
and Critical Care Medicine.
Damp living conditions have long been linked with children's lower respiratory
problems. But the role of mold and mildew in the home has never been clear,
writes lead researcher Paul C. Stark, PhD, a professor of environmental health
with Harvard University School of Public Health.
It's an important issue, since young children with respiratory infections have
significantly worse problems later on, he writes. Children's immune systems
develop in the first year of life.
In their study, investigators followed 499 infants during their first year --
all children of parents with asthma and allergies. Every two months, a
researcher checked with the child's caregiver to see if there had been
pneumonia, croup, bronchitis, or other respiratory problems.
Mold and air samples were taken from each home throughout the study. Researchers
found that 324 homes had high levels of more than one type of fungi.
When factored with other environmental information, such as number of siblings,
whether siblings attended daycare, water damage in the home, and number of units
in their building, they found that children in homes with the most fungi --
mold, mildew, or water damage -- had an 86% higher risk of developing upper
respiratory infections in the first year.
Those children who did not wheeze but had respiratory problems were most
affected by household fungus. For non-wheezing children, their sensitivity to
fungus is likely not an allergy but an inflammation of small airways that can
lead to respiratory problems, Stark writes.
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