Posts Tagged ‘Antibiotics’
We all know that there are times when antibiotics are indispensable, but the wrong use we make of them can cause some bacteria to become resistant. For this reason, you should use antibiotics only when your doctor prescribes to us, or use a natural alternative that has a more limited efficacy but fewer side effects. The natural antibiotics commonly used are:-ECHINACEA: it is effective against bacteria, fungi and viruses. It works by stimulating the immune system. -GINGER: has a great capacity to kill germs that cause infections gástricas.-MINT: is especially recommended to prevent infection intestinales.-propolis or propolis: is made by bees. It is one of the best products we can find in nature. Combat respiratory infections of the skin, genitourinary tract, gastritis and colitis.-ROMERO: if we fight germs infusion respiratory or intestinal diseases. In the food prevents any gérmenes.-THYME: does not kill bacteria but prevents them from growing. It is also a disinfectant and helps heal heridas.Como you can see, nature gives us a lot of things so we can improve our health without having to suffer the side effects of traditional medicine.
Early exposure to antibiotics would increase by 13 percent the risk of childhood asthma, a figure much lower than known so far, according to a systematic review of the literature. However, more rigorous studies are needed.
The study, published in Pediatrics, “provides evidence for caution in interpreting this relationship,” said lead researcher Dr. Michael B. Bracken, an epidemiologist at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Bracken’s team reviewed the medical literature and identified 22 studies on how exposure to antibiotics during pregnancy or the first year of life influences the risk of developing asthma up to 18 years old.
Children who had been exposed to antibiotics between birth and first year of life were 52 percent more likely to develop asthma than those without such exposure. In the three studies of children exposed during pregnancy, the possibility grew 24 percent.
The team acknowledges that there may be potential biases. For example, parents of children with asthma are more likely to remember any early use of drugs and the initial symptoms of asthma may be confused with a respiratory infection and treated with antibiotics, leading to possible reverse causality. To study better, the team conducted a separate analysis based on factors such as study design.
As expected, retrospective studies showed a higher association: exposure to antibiotics in children doubled the risk of developing asthma. So did the jobs that were not controlled early respiratory infections. Read the rest of this entry »