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Courtesy of [livejournal.com profile] lsanderson - would you believe a link between reduced human worm-infestation and increased incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (such as Crohns)?

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/29/magazine/29wwln-essay-t.html?_r=1&ref=magazine&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin


The Worm Turns


By MOISES VELASQUEZ-MANOFF



In the early 1990s, Joel Weinstock, a gastroenterologist, encountered a puzzle. The prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease (I.B.D.) across North America increased markedly during the 20th century. Many thought that “bad” genes would eventually explain the spike, but Weinstock didn’t buy it. In areas where fewer than two generations ago the I.B.D. incidence might have been as low as 1 in 10,000, it was now 1 in 250. A defective gene couldn’t spread that quickly, he reasoned. It had to be something in the environment. But what? Stumped, Weinstock tried turning the question around. Instead of asking what triggered I.B.D., he asked what, before the 20th century, protected against it?

At the time, Weinstock, then at the University of Iowa, was editing a book on parasitic worms. These worms, or helminths, have a paradoxical effect on the host. Rather than induce inflammation, which is the body’s typical response to invasion, the intruders calm the host immune system. They force a peace, scientists think, to avoid eviction and keep the host — their home and food source — as healthy as possible. As Weinstock considered the I.B.D. puzzle, he wondered if immune manipulation by worms could incidentally protect against other diseases.

Comparison of the prevalence of I.B.D. and surveys of worm-infestation rates revealed a telling pattern. About 10 years after improved hygiene and deworming efforts reduced worms in a given population, I.B.D. rates jumped. Weinstock had his hypothesis: after a long coevolution, the human immune system came to depend on the worms for proper functioning. When cleaner conditions and new medicines evicted the worms from our bodies, the immune system went out of kilter. “Hygiene has made our lives better,” says Weinstock, now at Tufts University. “But in the process of eliminating exposure to the 10 or 20 things that can make us sick, we’re also eliminating exposure to things that make us well.”

At the time of Weinstock’s initial musings, epidemiologists had already dubbed this notion “the hygiene hypothesis”: as improved hygiene reduced exposure to certain infectious agents, the immune system began malfunctioning. By the late 20th century, autoimmune disorders, characterized by the body’s defenses attacking some aspect of the self, had increased markedly, and allergic diseases, defined by an overblown immune response to nonthreatening substances, afflicted almost half the people in the developed world.

If eliminating worms led to an increase in disease, could re-introducing worms actually treat these diseases? In mice, the answer was yes. Worms were used to “inoculate” against mouse asthma, Type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis and I.B.D. But how to re-worm humans? We got rid of them for a reason. Too many worms can lead to anemia or obstructed bowels. The wrong kind can cause considerable suffering, even death.

Weinstock spotted a prime candidate on pig farms. Pig farmers are chronically exposed to Trichuris suis, the pig whipworm, and tolerate it with no apparent side effects. (This is not the potentially dangerous worm found in undercooked pork.)

In 2005, he published results from two human studies. After ingesting 2,500 microscopic T. suis eggs at 3-week intervals for 24 weeks, 23 of 29 Crohn’s patients responded positively. (Crohn’s disease belongs to the I.B.D. family, which also includes ulcerative colitis.) Twenty-one went into complete remission. In the second study, 13 of 30 ulcerative colitis patients improved compared with 4 in the 24-person placebo group.

Scientists around the world are intrigued. Several large studies are under way. Trials using T. suis eggs on patients with multiple sclerosis, Crohn’s and hay fever are beginning in the United States, Australia and Denmark, respectively. In Germany, scientists are planning studies on asthma and food allergies. Other European scientists, meanwhile, plan to replicate many of these experiments with Necator americanus, a human hookworm.

When scientists unravel how helminths manipulate the immune system — work is already under way — Weinstock foresees new worm-based drugs. But that may be a long way off, he says. Anyway, the pill approach risks missing the greater lesson. As he says, “We’re part of our environment; we’re not separate from it.” It’s a simple observation with profound implications that are changing how scientists view the human organism. The dawning realization is this: You are not just your genetic self. You are a community of interacting organisms. This You ecosystem includes the bacteria that outnumber your genetic cells by 10 to 1, various fungi, viruses and just maybe a few parasites as well. Disturb or remove any key player, and the whole system can come unbalanced.

Moises Velasquez-Manoff is a writer living in New York.

Date: 2008-06-30 02:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jimtbari.livejournal.com
I was just mentioning this sort of thing to a friend of mine the other day.

A while back (one or two years, maybe?), I read an blog post about someone who had very bad asthma/allergies and had heard about this effect, but wasn't able to get into a study. So he took a trip to some particular poor country (I forget which, but I want to say it's in the Caribbean or central America) and walked around in his bare feet (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookworm#Life_cycle) until he became infected with hookworms. He claimed it pretty much completely cleared up his asthma (though keeping himself infected was a fairly disgusting process, albeit not as disgusting as getting infected in the first place).

Date: 2008-06-30 02:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jimtbari.livejournal.com
And here it is (http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2006/4/30/91945/8971). Listed as a reference in the Wikipedia article I linked, unsurprisingly enough.

Date: 2008-06-30 02:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalmn.livejournal.com
ew ew ew ew ew ew ew

if it would get rid of the arthritis i might try it

and throw up a lot

ew ew ew ew ew ew ew

Date: 2008-06-30 06:31 am (UTC)
arkuat: masked up (Default)
From: [personal profile] arkuat
This got mentioned in meeting this morning. About how we our"selves" are inextricably intertwingled parts of "our" environment.

I'm strangely reminded of Butler's stated motivation for writing "Bloodchild".

As for those considering worm therapy, remember back in the day when the yogurt industry spent so much money on (accurate and informative) advertising reminding us about how our bowels were always so unsatisfactory after having taken a massive course of antibiotics, and that some of the bacteria living there were good for us? This is just more of the same, with the ickiness factor cranked up a bit higher for the new millennium.

Date: 2008-06-30 12:15 pm (UTC)
ext_8716: (Default)
From: [identity profile] trixtah.livejournal.com
Wow, fascinating, if gross.

It's cool what's being learned about causative factors these days, though. We now know that the vast majority of ulcers are caused by a bacterium that can be obliterated with antibiotics. The virus(es) that causes genital warts causes cervical cancer, and cancers located in other mucous membranes. They found the appendix is a little storage centre used to replenish the intestine with all its beneficial bacteria in the case of it all being wiped out by an illness (or these days, strong medications). Yay connections.

Date: 2008-06-30 03:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cakmpls.livejournal.com
Growing up, our kids had far, far fewer colds and such than most kids. (We kept reading that the average child had six colds each winter; we'd go through winters when none of them had a single cold or similar URI.) We've always said that there were three factors in that: (1) they were never, ever exposed to tobacco smoke; (2) we had a water cooler and paper cups, so that from very young they could get their own drink when they wanted, and so drank more water than average; (3) we didn't bathe them (or later, tell them to bathe) every day, or even every other day.
Edited Date: 2008-06-30 03:26 pm (UTC)

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