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/ Health News / 2010 / February 2010 / February 4, 2010 |
Married people twice as likely to become fat than their single counterparts
Anti-obesity drugs unlikely to provide lasting health benefits
Obesity, passive smoking cut supply of oxygen to unborn child
Reportlinker Adds Global Milk Industry
Cellular defect that leads to cancer discovered
Why family history ups Alzheimers risk - especially from the maternal side
Cough medicine ingredient noscapine may help fight prostate cancer
Inactivating Skp2 gene may help fight cancer
Media usually covers aggressive cancer treatment and survival than death
Stress during pregnancy ups offsprings asthma risk
Low vitamin D levels associated with higher rates of asthma among kids
Adopt holistic approach for weight loss, says expert
Forget dieting or gruelling workout regimes -adopting a holistic approach to losing weight would be enough to feed your body the nourishment it craves for, says medical director of Greenwich Hospital. ANI
IVF babies at higher diabetes, obesity risk
A new study by scientists at Temple University in Philadelphia has shown that the DNA of babies conceived through IVF differs from that of other kids, putting them at higher risk of diseases such as diabetes and obesity later in life. ANI
Smoke food flavourings may be toxic to humans
One of the flavourings used to give smoke taste to meat, cheese or fish, could be toxic to humans, says the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). ANI
A mothers exposure to bisphenol A, a chemical used to make everything from plastic water bottles and food packaging to sunglasses and CDs, may increase the odds that her children will develop asthma, says a new study.
Washington, Feb 4 : A mother's exposure to bisphenol A, a chemical used to make everything from plastic water bottles and food packaging to sunglasses and CDs, may increase the odds that her children will develop asthma, says a new study.
Studies have linked BPA exposure to reproductive disorders, Obesity, abnormal brain development as well as breast and prostate cancers, and in January the Food and Drug Administration announced that it was concerned about "the potential effects of BPA on the brain, behavior and prostate gland of fetuses, infants and young children."
Now, mouse experiments by University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston researchers have produced evidence that a mother's exposure to BPA may also increase the odds that her children will develop asthma.
Using a well-established mouse model for asthma, the investigators found that the offspring of female mice exposed to BPA showed significant signs of the disorder, unlike those of mice shielded from BPA.
"We gave BPA in drinking water starting a week before pregnancy, at levels calculated to produce a body concentration that was the same as that in a human mother, and continued on through the pregnancy and lactation periods," said UTMB associate professor Terumi Midoro-Horiuti, lead author of a paper on the study appearing in the February issue of Environmental Health Perspectives.
Four days after birth, the researchers sensitized the baby mice with an allergy-provoking ovalbumin injection, followed by a series of daily respiratory doses of ovalbumin, the main protein in egg white.
The researchers then measured levels of antibodies against ovalbumin and quantities of inflammatory white blood cells known as eosinophils in the lungs of the mouse pups. They also used two different methods to measure lung function.
UTMB professor Randall Goldblum, also an author of the paper, said: "What we were looking for is the asthma response to a challenge, something like what might happen if you had asthma and got pollen in your nose or lungs, you might have an asthma attack."
"All four of our indicators of asthma response showed up in the BPA group, much more so than in the pups of the nonexposed mice," Goldblum added.
ANI