Sat05182013

Last update10:49:38 AM GMT

Back You & Your Family Too clean for your own good?
28 Oct 2012

Too clean for your own good?


by: ‘Diji Vaughan, MD, FAAP

 

Is it conceivable to believe that an individual can be too clean for their own good? Maybe.

 

We know that the immune system in all mammals- a group that includes humans too, has an adaptive capability that matures and becomes more savvy as the challenges mounted by invading germs are responded to over a lifetime. Basically, “the troops remain battle ready when they are continually fighting and winning”. This has been cast as a potential mutually beneficial relationship for the body and the invading germs in a theory proposed to explain the rising trend of allergy and immune system mediated diseases called the ‘hygiene hypothesis’.

This theory maintains that living in very clean and hygienic environments robs one of the exposure to microbial organisms which are beneficial for the maturation and ability to distinguish invaders from what belongs to the body. An abnormal maturation process involving the immune system’s cells and antibodies may then arise and predispose individuals to varying levels of abnormal immune responses which manifest in various disease forms.

Needless to say, this is still a theory and not validated as a scientific fact yet. Researchers from the University of Michigan School of Public Health observed a pattern  corroborating another aspect of this theory, more amenable to scientific scrutiny. They examined data from the National Health and Nutrition Survey (NHANES) for the period 2003-2006. Two common environmental toxins, Triclosan and Bisphenol A  both of which have known effects on the delicate balance of the immune and hormonal systems respectively in the body were looked for in patients aged 6 and older who also had diseases attributable to immune dysfunction for example, Hay fever. Their findings published online in November 2010, showed a relationship between having high levels of this Triclosan in the body and immune dysfunction associated disease. Triclosan, is an antimicrobial agent and is ubiquitous in the home environment. Diapers, antibacterial soaps, and toothpaste are some household items that contain this product. The higher levels of Triclosan seen in these patients may have sufficiently altered the population and type of microbes that these individuals would have been normally exposed to and therefore led to abnormal maturation of their immune system over time and subsequently modified their overall immune response and foster the development of allergy related disease states. This writer has observed trends not subjected to scientific testing at any level yet, in children of first generation West African immigrants born in the USA (Bronx NY) who go on to develop varying levels of allergy symptoms which are mediated at many levels by immune dysregulation. The parents of these patients demonstrate no such problems and a cautious assumption may be to say their earlier childhood exposures in the developing world to different microbial agents in childhood may have fostered a proper maturation and development of their immune systems, i.e the troops (immune cells) remained battle ready and matured as anticipated. This perhaps fostered the innate ability of the immune system to distinguish self from non-self and keep the focus on the invading germs.

As we push the frontiers of medicine daily in the 21st century, some of these basic questions remain unanswered and beg for more research and elucidation of the facts. Until then, we will keep the hygiene hypothesis in the realm of hypotheses and continue to take all necessary precautions for clean, safe healthy skies, water, air, soil, food and above all planet. Louis Armstrong’s timeless classic, still chimes, “what a wonderful world”.

 

blog comments powered by Disqus
‘Diji Vaughan, MD, FAAP

‘Diji Vaughan, MD, FAAP

‘Diji Vaughan, MD, FAAP obtained his primary medical training at the College of Medicine of the University of Lagos. Since graduation, Dr Vaughan has practiced medicine in diverse clinical settings from Family medicine; Ophthalmology to Critical Care/Anesthesiology before residency training in General Pediatrics at Bronx Lebanon Hospital Center/ Children’s Hospital at Montefiore Bronx NY in 2005.

He practiced as a Pediatric Hospitalist in Phoenix AZ after residency training and was adjudged the best General Pediatrician by the Department of Pediatrics at St Joseph’s Hospital & Medical Center, Phoenix AZ for the year 2009 and went to serve on the Pediatric residency training program faculty until 2010. Dr. Vaughan pioneered a successful sole-pediatric hospitalist program afterwards in the east valley, which has now evolved into a full-fledged traditional pediatric practice poised for excellence in primary care. ‘Diji is married with three children and currently lives in Gilbert AZ. He’s a keen historian and soccer fan. His current professional interests include Comparative Effectiveness Research, Tropical Medicine and Developmental/Behavioral Pediatrics.

Website: www.springfieldpeds.com

Contact Details

  • Address
    270 E. Hunt Highway, Suite 18
  • City
    San Tan Valley
  • State or Province
    AZ
  • Zip Code
    85143
  • Country
    United States
  • Telephone
    480-336-2815

Social Profiles

Twitter Updates

 

Advertise on SanTanValley.com

With millions of page reads per month, SanTanValley.com has more traffic of any other local website today.

Our visitors come to our site from Canada and all over the United States with the highest concentration coming from San Tan Valley, Mesa, Tempe, Gilbert, Chandler, Florence, Coolidge, Apache Junction, Phoenix and Scottsdale, looking for information about San Tan Valley, AZ, Arizona's newest community, located in the 2nd fastest growing county in the US.

If you have a business, you want to be on SanTanValley.com!