Why C-section births might cause eczema in babies

This is just about the oddest bit of research I've recently come across: Apparently C-sections might cause eczema in babies.
No one fully knows what causes eczema, of course. But immunologists have for years been suspecting that eczema is linked, in some way, to autoimmune disorders. And they've also been learning that if you want to have a good immune system, you need to have a healthy balance of intestinal bacteria.
New evidence supporting this argument comes in the latest Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, which reports on a fascinating study by some scientists out of Lund University in Sweden. The reseachers studied the feces of babies one week after birth to get a sense of how well-balanced the bacteria in their gut were. They found that newborn infants who had imbalanced intestinal bacteria often developed atopical eczema by the age of 18 months.
But here's the interesting thing: How do newborn infants wind up with bacterial imbalances? Because of their mothers. During vaginal delivery, the children are pick up a lot of lactobacilli -- lactic acid bacteria -- from their mother's vagina. Lactobacilli are crucial for maintaining a healthy balance of intestinal flora. If the mother has any bacterial imbalances, the babies won't pick up enough lactobacilli, as this press release notes:
"With a vaginal delivery the child will come into close contact with the mother's bacteria. If the mother has a good flora of bacteria, the contact is an important help for the child to be able to be colonized by bacteria in the proper way. It can be assumed that certain hygiene measures, such as antibiotics given in some countries in connection with deliveries, in normal cases may have a deleterious effect, since the mother then is at risk to get a skewed bacteria flora, which she passes on to the child," Goran Molin reasons.
And as Molin goes on to point out, in the US today, one third of all women have bacterial vaginosis -- a condition in which bacteria other than lactobacilli dominate.
What Molin doesn't talk about, but which is equally interesting, is the drastic increase in the use of ceasarean-section delivery in the last few decades. If there's no vaginal delivery, then there's presumably no way to pass on a healthy dose of lactobacilli, either.
This made me wonder about myself, actually. I developed atopical eczema in my late teens, and it's slowly grown more annoying over the years; and I was born by C-section. Ditto for the younger of my two older sisters. My eldest sister wasn't born via C-section and she has no eczema. A vanishingly small and subjective sample, of course, but it fits the pattern the Swedish guys would predict.
Given the roaring debate around C-sections in this country, I'm surprised I haven't heard much about this study. Though that's probably because it doesn't exactly lead to particularly palatable Thanksgiving conversations, eh? Hey mom: What was the bacterial count in your vagina when I was born? Oh boy.
Posted by Clive Thompson at February 18, 2008 09:02 PM
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SO glad to read this research! I think it goes a lot further than this - look at the rise of allergies and asthma in relation to the increase of C's. The health of the gut is incredibly important. Have you read about the improvement Autistic kids demonstrate when they are put on a probiotic supplement to get their friendly flora counts up? Pretty compelling evidence.
It's not too late for you, you know! You should get yourself some probiotics and re-establish the missing colonies in your body!
Posted by: Laura at February 19, 2008 8:04 AM
Yeah, I've had a couple of people suggest that also. Never tried it yet though!
Posted by: Clive at February 19, 2008 11:02 AM
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SO glad to read this research! I think it goes a lot further than this - look at the rise of allergies and asthma in relation to the increase of C's. The health of the gut is incredibly important. Have you read about the improvement Autistic kids demonstrate when they are put on a probiotic supplement to get their friendly flora counts up? Pretty compelling evidence.
It's not too late for you, you know! You should get yourself some probiotics and re-establish the missing colonies in your body!
Posted by: Laura
at February 19, 2008 8:04 AM
Yeah, I've had a couple of people suggest that also. Never tried it yet though!
Posted by: Clive
at February 19, 2008 11:02 AM