Journal article
The interaction between early life upper respiratory tract infection and birth during the pollen season on rye-sensitized hay fever and ryegrass sensitization - A birth cohort study
A Kemp, AL Ponsonby, T Dwyer, J Cochrane, A Pezic, A Carmichael, J Carlin, G Jones
Pediatric Allergy and Immunology | WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC | Published : 2009
Abstract
Studies on early life viral respiratory infection and subsequent atopic disease in childhood have conflicting findings. Animal models show that viral respiratory infection in conjunction with allergen presentation can enhance sensitization. This prospective study assesses the influence of an upper respiratory tract infection (URI) in the first month of life and the season of birth on the development of hay fever and ryegrass allergen sensitization in childhood. From a Tasmanian cohort born during 1988 and 1989, a group of 498 children were followed up at 8 yr and another different group of 415 children were followed up at 16 yr. The ryegrass pollen season in Tasmania occurs in November and D..
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Awarded by National Institute of Child Health and Human Development