Publications by authors named "Jeremy Bufford"

Background: The impact of preschool environmental conditions on classroom aeroallergen concentrations is not fully understood.

Objective: To examine the relationship between school environmental conditions and classroom aeroallergen concentrations in the Pulaski County Head Start (HS) Program.

Methods: Thirty-three HS centers in Pulaski County, Arkansas, underwent a detailed environmental evaluation.

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Although pet exposure is known to trigger or worsen allergy symptoms and asthma in patients sensitized to pets, data from recent years has shown that pet exposure in early childhood may actually prevent the development of allergic sensitization and allergic diseases including allergic rhinitis, asthma, and atopic dermatitis. The concept of a protective pet effect remains controversial because these findings have not been duplicated in all studies. Moreover, some studies suggest that pet exposure promotes allergic disease.

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The hygiene hypothesis revisited.

Immunol Allergy Clin North Am

May 2005

The original hygiene hypothesis proposed that reductions in family size and exposure to childhood infections were responsible for the rise in atopic diseases. Numerous epidemiologic and longitudinal studies have been performed to test this hypothesis, which has evolved in response to these findings and emerging concepts related to the innate immune response and immunoregulatory mechanisms. Collectively, these advances raise hope that the concepts espoused in original hygiene hypothesis may soon lead to new preventive approaches to atopic diseases.

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