Dean G, McLoughlin H, Brady R, Adelstein A M, Tallett-Williams J
Br Med J. 1976 Apr 10;1(6014):861-4. doi: 10.1136/bmj.1.6014.861.
Among immigrants resident in greater London from Europe, Ireland, the USSR, the old Commonwealth countries of Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, North and South America, Egypt, Turkey, and Iran the incidence of admission to hospital for probable multiple sclerosis (MS) between 1960 and 1972 was high or moderately high. The incidence was the same order as that found in those born in the United Kingdom. Immigrants from India, Pakistan, and other Asian countries and from new Commonwealth Africa and America, which includes the West Indies, had a low incidence of hospital admission for MS. Immigrants from countries where the risk of MS is low whose parents were born in Europe had a reduced incidence of admission to hospital but not the very low incidence found in those parents were also born in these countries. Emigrating to England from low risk parts of the world did not seem to increase the risk of developing MS.
在居住于大伦敦地区的来自欧洲、爱尔兰、苏联、澳大利亚、加拿大和新西兰等英联邦旧成员国、南北美洲、埃及、土耳其和伊朗的移民中,1960年至1972年间因疑似多发性硬化症(MS)入院的发生率较高或中等偏高。这一发生率与在英国出生的人所观察到的发生率处于同一水平。来自印度、巴基斯坦和其他亚洲国家以及包括西印度群岛在内的新英联邦非洲和美洲地区的移民,因MS入院的发生率较低。父母出生在欧洲但来自MS风险较低国家的移民,其入院发生率有所降低,但不像父母也出生在这些国家的人那样极低。从世界上MS低风险地区移民到英国似乎并不会增加患MS的风险。