Islamabad, Feb 3 : Eczema in early childhood may influence behavior and mental health
later in life.
This is a key finding of a prospective birth cohort study
to which scientists of Helmholtz Zentrum München contributed.
In
cooperation with colleagues of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU), Technische
Universität München (TUM) and Marien-Hospital in Wesel, North Rhine-Westphalia
this study followed 5,991 children who were born between 1995 and
1998.
The study has been published in the current issue of the Journal of
Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
Researchers, led by Assistant Professor
Jochen Schmitt of Dresden University Hospital, Dr. Christian Apfelbacher
(Heidelberg University Hospital) and Dr. Joachim Heinrich of the Institute of
Epidemiology of Helmholtz Zentrum München, discovered that children who suffered
from eczema during the first two years of life were more likely to demonstrate
psychological abnormalities, in particular emotional problems, at age ten years
than children of the same age who had not suffered from the disease. "This
indicates that eczema can precede and lead to behavioral and psychological
problems in children," Dr. Heinrich explained.
Children whose eczema
persisted beyond the first two years of life were more likely to have mental
health problems than children who had eczema only in infancy.
Within the
framework of the GINIplus study, scientists tracked the family history of the
children, collected data on their physical health and emotional condition at age
10 years and gathered information on their daily lives. Questions were asked
about the course of disease -- also in early childhood -- with special focus on
diseases such as eczema, asthma, allergic rhinitis, stress tolerance and
behavioral abnormalities.
Eczema is a non-infectious skin disease
characterized by scaling itchy skin rashes. It is the most common skin disease
in children and adolescents. Children who suffer from eczema are known to have
an increased predisposition for hay fever and allergic asthma. Eczema symptoms
are accompanied by a broad spectrum of secondary symptoms, such as sleep
disorders.
"We suspect that it is mainly the secondary symptoms that have
a long-term effect on the emotions of the affected children," Joachim Heinrich
said. The authors of the study therefore recommend documenting the occurrence of
eczema as potential risk factor for later psychological problems in the
children's medical records, even if the actual primary disease abates and
disappears during the course of childhood.
Ends
SA/EN
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Eczema in early childhood may influence mental health
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