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Exercise might lower kids' hay
fever risk
New York -
Regular physical activity might offer children some protection
from the sniffs and sneezes of hay fever, a study suggests.
German researchers found that among
the 1,700 children they followed for up to 12 years, those who were
inactive at the study's start were 50 percent more likely to develop
hay fever, compared with their regularly active peers.
According to the researchers, their
findings are unlikely to be a case of "reverse causality," where hay
fever caused some children to avoid outdoor activities. For one, the
study followed the children over time, documenting new cases of hay
fever. In addition, sedentary children were inactive year-round, not
only during pollen season.
Instead, the findings, published in
the journal Allergy, suggest that regular exercise may somehow keep
hay fever at bay.
Exactly how is unclear, said Dr.
Yvonne Kohlhammer, the study's lead author and a researcher at GSF -
National Research Center for Environment and Health in Neuherberg,
Germany.
Other studies, she told Reuters
Health, have shown that moderate exercise may benefit immune system
function. So this might explain the lower hay fever risk seen in
active children, Kohlhammer speculated.
The study included 1,703 children
ages 5 to 14 who were first examined in 1992-1993, then at least once
more over the next 12 years. During the first assessment, parents
reported on their children's physical activity levels; only 6 percent
were completely sedentary, while 79 percent regularly exercised or
played sports.
Sedentary children, the study found,
had more than twice the rate of hay fever as regularly active kids,
and their risk of developing the allergy during the study period was
also elevated.
The link between exercise habits and
hay fever persisted even when the researchers weighed other factors
that affect children's allergy risk -- including family history of
allergies, exposure to pets and cigarette smoke, and whether a child
was breastfed or bottle-fed.
If the findings are correct, hay
fever protection could be one more reason for kids to be regularly
active, according to Kohlhammer -- though for now, she noted, that
remains speculation. -- Reuters Limited
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