Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia

Summary The Finnish and Russian Karelia are adjacent areas in northern Europe, socio‐economically distinct but geoclimatically similar. The Karelia Allergy Study was commenced in 1998 to characterize the allergy profiles in the two areas. Allergy prevalence had increased in Finland since the early 1...

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Published in:Clinical & Experimental Allergy
Main Authors: Haahtela, T., Laatikainen, T., Alenius, H., Auvinen, P., Fyhrquist, N., Hanski, I., von Hertzen, L., Jousilahti, P., Kosunen, T. U., Markelova, O., Mäkelä, M. J., Pantelejev, V., Uhanov, M., Zilber, E., Vartiainen, E.
Other Authors: Academy of Finland, European Research Council, European Union′s Seventh Framework Programme (MAARS, MeDALL), Helsinki University Hospital, Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation, Juselius Foundation
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cea.12527
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spelling crwiley:10.1111/cea.12527 2024-06-23T07:54:19+00:00 Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia Haahtela, T. Laatikainen, T. Alenius, H. Auvinen, P. Fyhrquist, N. Hanski, I. von Hertzen, L. Jousilahti, P. Kosunen, T. U. Markelova, O. Mäkelä, M. J. Pantelejev, V. Uhanov, M. Zilber, E. Vartiainen, E. Academy of Finland European Research Council European Union′s Seventh Framework Programme (MAARS, MeDALL) Helsinki University Hospital Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation Juselius Foundation 2015 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cea.12527 https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2Fcea.12527 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/cea.12527 en eng Wiley http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor Clinical & Experimental Allergy volume 45, issue 5, page 891-901 ISSN 0954-7894 1365-2222 journal-article 2015 crwiley https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12527 2024-06-11T04:51:01Z Summary The Finnish and Russian Karelia are adjacent areas in northern Europe, socio‐economically distinct but geoclimatically similar. The Karelia Allergy Study was commenced in 1998 to characterize the allergy profiles in the two areas. Allergy prevalence had increased in Finland since the early 1960s, but the situation in Russia was unknown. The key finding was that allergic symptoms and diseases were systematically more common in Finnish children and adults than in their Russian counterparts. For example, in the early 2000s, hay fever in school children was almost non‐existent in Russian Karelia, and only 2% were sensitized to birch pollen compared with 27% in Finnish Karelia. Adult birth cohorts showed that among those born in the 1940s, the sensitization to pollens and pets was at the same low level in both countries, but among younger generation born in the late 1970s, the difference was already manifold. Seropositivity to some pathogens, microbial content in house dust and drinking water seemed to confer allergy protection in Russia. In subsequent studies, it became apparent that on the Finnish side, healthy children had a more biodiverse living environment as well as greater diversity of certain bacterial classes on their skin than atopic children. Abundance of skin commensals, especially Acinetobacter (gammaproteobacteria), associated with anti‐inflammatory gene expression in blood leucocytes. In vivo experiments with the mouse model demonstrated that intradermally applied A cinetobacter protected against atopic sensitization and lung inflammation. These observations support the notion that the epidemic of allergy and asthma results from reduced exposure to natural environments with rich microbiota, changed diet and sedentary lifestyle. Genetic studies have confirmed strong influence of lifestyle and environment. With our results from the Karelia study, a 10‐year National Allergy Programme was started in 2008 to combat the epidemic in Finland. Article in Journal/Newspaper karelia* karelia* Wiley Online Library Clinical & Experimental Allergy 45 5 891 901
institution Open Polar
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description Summary The Finnish and Russian Karelia are adjacent areas in northern Europe, socio‐economically distinct but geoclimatically similar. The Karelia Allergy Study was commenced in 1998 to characterize the allergy profiles in the two areas. Allergy prevalence had increased in Finland since the early 1960s, but the situation in Russia was unknown. The key finding was that allergic symptoms and diseases were systematically more common in Finnish children and adults than in their Russian counterparts. For example, in the early 2000s, hay fever in school children was almost non‐existent in Russian Karelia, and only 2% were sensitized to birch pollen compared with 27% in Finnish Karelia. Adult birth cohorts showed that among those born in the 1940s, the sensitization to pollens and pets was at the same low level in both countries, but among younger generation born in the late 1970s, the difference was already manifold. Seropositivity to some pathogens, microbial content in house dust and drinking water seemed to confer allergy protection in Russia. In subsequent studies, it became apparent that on the Finnish side, healthy children had a more biodiverse living environment as well as greater diversity of certain bacterial classes on their skin than atopic children. Abundance of skin commensals, especially Acinetobacter (gammaproteobacteria), associated with anti‐inflammatory gene expression in blood leucocytes. In vivo experiments with the mouse model demonstrated that intradermally applied A cinetobacter protected against atopic sensitization and lung inflammation. These observations support the notion that the epidemic of allergy and asthma results from reduced exposure to natural environments with rich microbiota, changed diet and sedentary lifestyle. Genetic studies have confirmed strong influence of lifestyle and environment. With our results from the Karelia study, a 10‐year National Allergy Programme was started in 2008 to combat the epidemic in Finland.
author2 Academy of Finland
European Research Council
European Union′s Seventh Framework Programme (MAARS, MeDALL)
Helsinki University Hospital
Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation
Juselius Foundation
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Haahtela, T.
Laatikainen, T.
Alenius, H.
Auvinen, P.
Fyhrquist, N.
Hanski, I.
von Hertzen, L.
Jousilahti, P.
Kosunen, T. U.
Markelova, O.
Mäkelä, M. J.
Pantelejev, V.
Uhanov, M.
Zilber, E.
Vartiainen, E.
spellingShingle Haahtela, T.
Laatikainen, T.
Alenius, H.
Auvinen, P.
Fyhrquist, N.
Hanski, I.
von Hertzen, L.
Jousilahti, P.
Kosunen, T. U.
Markelova, O.
Mäkelä, M. J.
Pantelejev, V.
Uhanov, M.
Zilber, E.
Vartiainen, E.
Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia
author_facet Haahtela, T.
Laatikainen, T.
Alenius, H.
Auvinen, P.
Fyhrquist, N.
Hanski, I.
von Hertzen, L.
Jousilahti, P.
Kosunen, T. U.
Markelova, O.
Mäkelä, M. J.
Pantelejev, V.
Uhanov, M.
Zilber, E.
Vartiainen, E.
author_sort Haahtela, T.
title Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia
title_short Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia
title_full Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia
title_fullStr Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia
title_full_unstemmed Hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia
title_sort hunt for the origin of allergy – comparing the finnish and russian karelia
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2015
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cea.12527
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2Fcea.12527
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/cea.12527
genre karelia*
karelia*
genre_facet karelia*
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op_source Clinical & Experimental Allergy
volume 45, issue 5, page 891-901
ISSN 0954-7894 1365-2222
op_rights http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12527
container_title Clinical & Experimental Allergy
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