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Gestational medication use, birth conditions, and early postnatal exposures for childhood asthma

Authors :
Yungling Leo Lee
Yang Ching Chen
Ching-Hui Tsai
Source :
Clinical and Developmental Immunology, Clinical and Developmental Immunology, Vol 2012 (2012)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Our aim is to explore (1) whether gestational medication use, mode of delivery, and early postnatal exposure correlate with childhood asthma, (2) the dose responsiveness of such exposure, and (3) their links to early- and late-onset asthma. We conducted a matched case-control study based on the Taiwan Children Health Study, which was a nationwide survey that recruited 12-to-14-year-old school children in 14 communities. 579 mothers of the participants were interviewed by telephone. Exclusive breastfeeding protected children from asthma. Notably, childhood asthma was significantly associated with maternal medication use during pregnancy, vacuum use during vaginal delivery, recurrent respiratory tract infections, hospitalization, main caregiver cared for other children, and early daycare attendance. Exposure to these factors led to dose responsiveness in relationships to asthma. Most of the exposures revealed a greater impact on early-onset asthma, except for vacuum use and daycare attendance.

Details

ISSN :
17402530
Volume :
2012
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinicaldevelopmental immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85d7104a793fdc120cba6fbc6801eb7f