Infections during the first year of life may lead to an increased risk of developing specific types of arthritis later in life.
A new study has found that infections during the first year of life may lead to an increased risk of developing specific types of arthritis later in life.
Researchers from the Karolinska Institute in Sweden found that infants who were hospitalised for infection before their first birthday had an increased likelihood of developing either juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) or adult rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in later life.Investigator Dr Cecilia Carlens of The Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden, said: "Whilst recent research has suggested that early life infections are of importance to the maturation of the immune system in general, our analysis shows a link between perinatal infection and increased RA and JIA risk in particular, highlighting the importance of a child's formative months on his or her rheumatic health in later life."
The Swedish register-based case-control study reviewed recorded data on individuals born nationwide between 1973 and 2002, and involved 333 RA patients and 3,334 JIA patients.
The analysis revealed that an increase in infections within the first 12 months is associated with an increased risk of developing JIA, a distinct type of RA that is less aggressive than sero-positive RA.
However, other parts of the study suggested that perinatal charactertics, such as low birth weight and the duration of the gestational period may also affect arthritis risk in later life. A longer gestational period of over 42 weeks, emerged as a potential risk factor for developing JIA.
The patient data reviewed was taken from the Swedish Inpatient Register and the Early Arthritis Register. Using the Swedish Medical Birth Register, four controls were randomly selected per case, matched by sex, year, and delivery-unit.
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Source-ANI
SPH