This article hit home, since we have a dog and my daughter may have asthma. Here is the link to the original article.
Original Article:
Having
a dog in the home may worsen the response to air pollution for a child
with asthma, according to a new study from researchers at the Keck
School of Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC).
The study was published the last week of August in the online edition of Environmental Health Perspectives, the journal of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
In "Dog Ownership Enhances Symptomatic Responses to Air Pollution in
Children with Asthma," researchers looked at the relationship between
chronic cough, phlegm production or bronchitis and dog and cat
ownership among 475 southern California children with asthma who
participated in the Children's Health Study, a longitudinal study of
air pollution and respiratory health.
Children with dogs had significantly increased cough, phlegm
production and bronchitis responses to the measured pollutants,
including nitrogen dioxide, ozone, particulate matter and acid vapor.
There were no increases of these symptoms in children who lived in
homes without pets or who lived with only cats.
"Further work is needed to determine what it is about dogs that may
increase an asthmatic child's response to air pollution," said Rob
McConnell, MD, professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School of
Medicine of USC and lead author of the study.
McConnell and colleagues speculated that the increased response to
air pollution from a dog in the home may really be due to increased
levels of endotoxin, which is more common in homes where there is a dog.
"Cats are highly allergenic, and children with asthma are often
allergic to cats," McConnell said. "Therefore if an allergen were
enhancing the lung's response to air pollution, we'd be more likely to
see an association with cats. But in this study we see an effect of air
pollution in homes with dogs, so we think endotoxin exposure is a more
likely explanation for our results than allergen exposure."
Endotoxin is a part of the cell wall of common bacteria in the
environment. The authors note that inhaled endotoxin produces a marked
inflammatory response in the lungs, and it may cause the airways of
people with asthma to constrict. In previous studies, endotoxin has
been shown to enhance the inflammatory effect of diesel exhaust
particulate, inhaled highway aerosols and ozone in the lungs of
experimental animals.
"There's experimental literature that shows both allergens and
endotoxin interact with air pollution and increase the effect of each
other," McConnell said. "But there's been very little study to see if
these experiments have relevance for the general population of children
with asthma."
McConnell cautioned that much more study is needed to specify why,
exactly, children with asthma living in homes with dogs had an enhanced
response to air pollution.
"There are other possible explanations for the findings, and actual
measurements of home allergen and endotoxin, in addition to air
pollution, would be important to evaluate further our hypothesis," he
said. "It could also be that something only indirectly related to dogs
could explain these results, for example that kids with dogs exercise
outside more so they have more exposure to air pollution."
Rob McConnell: http://www.usc.edu/schools/medicine/ksomnfl.html
