id ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/208091
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
language English
topic allergy epidemic
allergy programme
biodiversity
immune tolerance
Karelia study
skin microbiome
IN-HOUSE DUST
ATOPIC SENSITIZATION
PROGRAM 2008-2018
CHILDHOOD ASTHMA
PREVALENCE
DISEASES
CHILDREN
FINLAND
RISK
IGE
3121 General medicine
internal medicine and other clinical medicine
3142 Public health care science
environmental and occupational health
spellingShingle allergy epidemic
allergy programme
biodiversity
immune tolerance
Karelia study
skin microbiome
IN-HOUSE DUST
ATOPIC SENSITIZATION
PROGRAM 2008-2018
CHILDHOOD ASTHMA
PREVALENCE
DISEASES
CHILDREN
FINLAND
RISK
IGE
3121 General medicine
internal medicine and other clinical medicine
3142 Public health care science
environmental and occupational health
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.
topic_facet allergy epidemic
allergy programme
biodiversity
immune tolerance
Karelia study
skin microbiome
IN-HOUSE DUST
ATOPIC SENSITIZATION
PROGRAM 2008-2018
CHILDHOOD ASTHMA
PREVALENCE
DISEASES
CHILDREN
FINLAND
RISK
IGE
3121 General medicine
internal medicine and other clinical medicine
3142 Public health care science
environmental and occupational health
description 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 Acinetobacter 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. Peer reviewed
author2 Department of Dermatology, Allergology and Venereology
Clinicum
Institute of Biotechnology
Biosciences
Centre of Excellence in Metapopulation Research
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Department of Bacteriology and Immunology
Medicum
DNA Sequencing and Genomics
format Review
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.
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 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/208091
genre karelia*
karelia*
genre_facet karelia*
karelia*
op_relation 10.1111/cea.12527
We thank all the families, adults and children in the Finnish and Russian Karelia who so willingly have taken part in the studies. Vesa Korpelainen, Tiina Vlasoff and Seija Lipponen from the North Karelia Centre for Public Health have organized and performed much of the fieldwork. Leena Lahti and Arja Herrala from the laboratory of Skin and Allergy Hospital took care of all the IgE analyses during the years. Vladimir Masyuk from Petrozavodsk has been of great help. We thank professors Pekka Puska, Jean Bousquet and Erika von Mutius for their constant support. The research leading to this review has received funding from many sources: Academy of Finland, the European Research Council, European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (MAARS, MeDALL), Helsinki University Hospital, Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation and Juselius Foundation.
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 2015 , ' Hunt for the origin of allergy - comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia. ' , Clinical and Experimental Allergy , vol. 45 , no. 5 , pp. 891-901 . https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12527
ORCID: /0000-0002-2933-3111/work/28817078
84927704265
c444564e-b5dc-4508-8514-affc71c9a5e7
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/208091
000353048000007
op_rights cc_by_nc_nd
openAccess
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
container_title Clinical & Experimental Allergy
container_volume 45
container_issue 5
container_start_page 891
op_container_end_page 901
_version_ 1787425889663844352
spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/208091 2024-01-07T09:44:29+01:00 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. Department of Dermatology, Allergology and Venereology Clinicum Institute of Biotechnology Biosciences Centre of Excellence in Metapopulation Research Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department of Bacteriology and Immunology Medicum DNA Sequencing and Genomics 2017-08-07T13:14:01Z 11 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/208091 eng eng Wiley 10.1111/cea.12527 We thank all the families, adults and children in the Finnish and Russian Karelia who so willingly have taken part in the studies. Vesa Korpelainen, Tiina Vlasoff and Seija Lipponen from the North Karelia Centre for Public Health have organized and performed much of the fieldwork. Leena Lahti and Arja Herrala from the laboratory of Skin and Allergy Hospital took care of all the IgE analyses during the years. Vladimir Masyuk from Petrozavodsk has been of great help. We thank professors Pekka Puska, Jean Bousquet and Erika von Mutius for their constant support. The research leading to this review has received funding from many sources: Academy of Finland, the European Research Council, European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (MAARS, MeDALL), Helsinki University Hospital, Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation and Juselius Foundation. 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 2015 , ' Hunt for the origin of allergy - comparing the Finnish and Russian Karelia. ' , Clinical and Experimental Allergy , vol. 45 , no. 5 , pp. 891-901 . https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12527 ORCID: /0000-0002-2933-3111/work/28817078 84927704265 c444564e-b5dc-4508-8514-affc71c9a5e7 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/208091 000353048000007 cc_by_nc_nd openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess allergy epidemic allergy programme biodiversity immune tolerance Karelia study skin microbiome IN-HOUSE DUST ATOPIC SENSITIZATION PROGRAM 2008-2018 CHILDHOOD ASTHMA PREVALENCE DISEASES CHILDREN FINLAND RISK IGE 3121 General medicine internal medicine and other clinical medicine 3142 Public health care science environmental and occupational health Review Article publishedVersion 2017 ftunivhelsihelda 2023-12-14T00:09:45Z 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 Acinetobacter 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. Peer reviewed Review karelia* karelia* HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository Clinical & Experimental Allergy 45 5 891 901