In the first three months, babies fed exclusively with breast milk have a significantly lower chance of being eczema at six years of age than their peers, but not breastfeeding or shorter, according to a new study.
Eczema is a chronic disease that causes itchy spots on the skin. Though genes and the environment play a role in the development, many questions, including those that are unresolved, are still for the time being - wrote Phys.org.
According to the American Center for Epidemiology (CDC), there are many chronic diseases, including asthma and obesity, in breast-fed children.
Researchers at the Children's National Children's Hospital in Washington presented their results at the annual conference of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology.
The data from a CDC and the American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) conducted between 2005 and 2007 on infant nutrition, followed by a 2012 child health study, were analyzed by a research team led by Katherine M. Balas.
For the first time, the study analyzed about 2,000 pregnant diets and then one year after the birth of the infant. In the follow-up, 1520 then dealt with the health, development and diet of six-year-olds.
Of these, about 300 were diagnosed with eczema at some point in their lifetime, and at the time of the 2012 study, 58.5 percent of six-year-olds had eczema. Those who lived in better socio-economic conditions and whose family had a food allergy were more likely to have eczema.
"For the time being, the evidence that exclusive breastfeeding can protect from later eczema, our research team is working to replace missing data, is a mixed one, " Balas said.
"Children who have been fed for three months or more only with breast milk have a lower chance of receiving eczema later than their never-or-less-than-three-month-old counterparts. symptoms will flare up over a long period of time, " he added.
(Source: marmalade.co.uk; MTI | Picture: pixabay.com)