Early Antibiotic Use Linked to Eczema and Fever According To Research

Early Antibiotic Use Linked to Eczema and Fever According To Research

Early antibiotic use was linked to eczema and hay fever over 400, 000 people according to research and past clinical studies.

According to an extensive analysis, the first two years of a baby is their development stage so everything that they are taking into their bodies has an effect on their bodies in the future. The result of the research shows that babies given antibiotics up to two years old have a higher risk to have allergies as adults.

On Tuesday (September 06, 2016) the findings point the association of allergies and hay fever was presented in London, at the European Respiratory Society meeting. In the past, an inconsistent result was the produced by their research linking allergies in early antibiotic use.

Early Antibiotic Use

It is said that the antibiotics cause disruption to the body’s immune system by the impact to microbes in the gut that results in negative immune responses. The specific mechanism that’s responsible for this cases was still unclear even though germs exposure during childhood is the usual thing to blame.

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