A recent study provides certain implications for
an association between exposure to antibiotics at a young age and the
development of allergic diseases, primarily asthma, in early childhood.1
At
some point, most people have gone to the doctor’s office and left with a
prescription for an antibiotic. In today’s world, antibiotics have developed a
connotation as a medicine that can ward off all sorts of sicknesses, which is only
partially true. What many people don’t realize is that antibiotics are strictly
useful for fighting bacterial infections and will have no effect on viral illnesses.*
Although antibiotics have saved countless lives since the discovery of
penicillin, there are some concerns about their use.
There two main negative consequences of
using antibiotics more liberally than in the past: some unhealthy bacteria have
increased resistance to treatment and administration of antibiotics can lead to
decreased levels of healthy bacteria. The first consequence relates to
overprescribing antibiotics for patients that may not be suffering from a
bacterial infection. Every time a person takes antibiotics, he or she increases
the likelihood that bacteria in the body will become resistant, which makes it
difficult to treat later infections.#
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| Commensal Bacteria |
The second consequence, which directly
relates to the study in question, has to do with the healthy bacteria that
reside in the human gastrointestinal tract. When antibiotics are introduced to
the body during infancy, a critical period for the development of the immune
system, disruption to gut microflora can occur.1 This could possibly
predispose patients to the development of an allergic phenotype. Research shows
that disruptions in the normal growth of gastrointestinal bacteria can prevent
regulatory T cells from properly dampening the immune system’s response to
respiratory allergens.$ For
more information, click here. Reduced diversity of microbes in infant excrement
has also been connected to an increased risk of allergic diseases late in
childhood.2
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| Mechanisms of Allergic Response |

