Medical Hypotheses
Volume 69, Issue 4 , Pages 731-740, 2007

Autism, asthma, inflammation, and the hygiene hypothesis

Gene Expression and Genomics Unit, RRB, TRIAD Technology Center, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Room 208, 333 Cassell Drive, Baltimore, MD 21224, United States

Received 30 January 2007; accepted 7 February 2007. published online 05 April 2007.

Summary 

Inflammation and the genes, molecules, and biological pathways that lead to inflammatory processes influence many important and disparate biological processes and disease states that are quite often not generally considered classical inflammatory or autoimmune disorders. These include development, reproduction, aging, tumor development and tumor rejection, cardiovascular pathologies, metabolic disorders, as well as neurological and psychiatric disorders. This paper compares parallel aspects of autism and inflammatory disorders with an emphasis on asthma. These comparisons include epidemiological, morphometric, molecular, and genetic aspects of both disease types, contributing to a hypothesis of autism in the context of the immune based hygiene hypothesis. This hypothesis is meant to address the apparent rise in the prevalence of autism in the population.

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PII: S0306-9877(07)00173-9

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2007.02.019

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 69, Issue 4 , Pages 731-740, 2007