Scania University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden.
BMC Pediatr. 2010 Aug 23;10:61. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-10-61.
Earlier studies have shown an association between secondhand tobacco smoke and allergy development in children. Furthermore, there is an increased risk of developing an allergy if the parents have an allergy. However, there are only few studies investigating the potential synergistic effect of secondhand tobacco smoke and allergic heredity on the development of an allergy.
The study was population-based cross-sectional with retrospective information on presence of secondhand tobacco smoke during early life. The study population consisted of children who visited the Child Health Care (CHC) centres in Malmö for their 4-year health checkup during 2006-2008 and whose parents answered a self-administered questionnaire (n = 4,278 children). The questionnaire was distributed to parents of children registered with the CHC and invited for the 4-year checkup during the study period.
There was a two to four times increased odds of the child having an allergy or having sought medical care due to allergic symptoms if at least one parent had an allergy, while there were rather small increased odds related to presence of secondhand smoke during the child's first month in life or at the age of 8 months. However, children with heredity for allergies and with presence of secondhand tobacco smoke during their first year in life had highly increased odds of developing an allergy and having sought medical care due to allergic symptoms at 4 years of age. Thus, there was a synergistic effect enhancing the independent effects of heredity and exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke on allergy development.
Children with a family history of allergies and early exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke is a risk group that prevention and intervention should pay extra attention to. The tobacco smoke effect on children is an essential and urgent question considering it not being self chosen, possibly giving life lasting negative health effects and being possible to reduce.
早期研究表明,二手烟与儿童过敏发展之间存在关联。此外,如果父母有过敏史,患过敏的风险会增加。然而,仅有少数研究调查了二手烟和过敏遗传对过敏发展的潜在协同作用。
本研究为基于人群的横断面研究,回顾性地调查了儿童生命早期接触二手烟的情况。研究人群包括 2006-2008 年在马尔默儿童保健中心接受 4 岁健康检查的儿童,其父母回答了一份自我管理的问卷(n=4278 名儿童)。问卷分发给在 CHC 登记的儿童的父母,并邀请他们在研究期间参加 4 岁的检查。
如果至少有一位父母患有过敏症,那么孩子患有过敏症或因过敏症状寻求医疗护理的几率会增加两到四倍,而在孩子生命的第一个月或 8 个月时接触二手烟的几率则会略有增加。然而,有过敏遗传史且在生命的第一年接触过二手烟的儿童,在 4 岁时患过敏症和因过敏症状寻求医疗护理的几率极高。因此,遗传和接触二手烟这两个因素之间存在协同作用,增强了它们各自对过敏发展的影响。
有过敏家族史和早期接触二手烟的儿童是一个风险群体,预防和干预措施应特别关注。考虑到接触二手烟不是儿童自己选择的,它可能会对儿童产生持久的负面健康影响,并有可能减少,因此,烟草烟雾对儿童的影响是一个至关重要且紧迫的问题。