A decline in the variety of life — including the plants and
animals that live around us, as well as the microbes on our
bodies — may play a role in the rapid rise in allergies and
asthma, indicates new research.
The study focused on a predisposition for allergies among 118
Finnish teenagers, finding links between a healthy immune system
(the body's system for fighting disease), growing up in more
natural environments and the presence of certain skin bacteria.
The results support the idea that declining biodiversity might be
contributing to
the rapid rise in allergies, asthma, and other inflammatory
diseases, which include autoimmune disorders and some types of
cancers in the developed world, said Ilkka Hanski, a research
professor at the University of Helsinki.
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