Folic Acid Treatment May Help Allergies, Asthma
From MedicalNewsToday.com
Folic acid, or vitamin B9, essential for red blood cell health and long known to reduce the risk of spinal birth defects, may also suppress allergic reactions and lessen the severity of allergy and asthma symptoms, according to new research from the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center.
In what is believed to be the first study in humans examining the link between blood levels of folate – the naturally occurring form of folic acid – and allergies, the Hopkins scientists say results add to mounting evidence that folate can help regulate inflammation. Recent studies, including research from Hopkins, have found a link between folate levels and inflammation-mediated diseases, including heart disease. A report on the Hopkins Children’s findings appears online ahead of print in the Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology.
Cautioning that it’s far too soon to recommend folic acid supplements to prevent or treat people with asthma and allergies, the researchers emphasize that more research needs to be done to confirm their results, and to establish safe doses and risks.
Reviewing the medical records of more than 8,000 people ages 2 to 85 the investigators tracked the effect of folate levels on respiratory and allergic symptoms and on levels of IgE antibodies, immune system markers that rise in response to an allergen. People with higher blood levels of folate had fewer IgE antibodies, fewer reported allergies, less wheezing and lower likelihood of asthma, researchers report.
“Our findings are a clear indication that folic acid may indeed help regulate immune response to allergens, and may reduce allergy and asthma symptoms,” says lead investigator Elizabeth Matsui, M.D. M.H.S., pediatric allergist at Hopkins Children’s. “But we still need to figure out the exact mechanism behind it, and to do so we need studies that follow people receiving treatment with folic acid, before we even consider supplementation with folic acid to treat or prevent allergies and asthma.”
The current recommendation for daily dietary intake of folic acid is 400 micrograms for healthy men and non-pregnant women. Many cereals and grain products are already fortified with folate, and folate is found naturally in green, leafy vegetables, beans and nuts.
Other findings of the study:
People with the lowest folate levels (below 8 nanograms per milliliter) had 40 percent higher risk of wheezing than people with the highest folate levels (above 18 ng/ml).
People with the lowest folate levels had a 30 percent higher risk than those with the highest folate levels of having elevated IgE antibodies, markers of allergy predisposition.
Those with the lowest folate levels had 31 percent higher risk of atopy (allergic symptoms) than people with the highest folate levels.
Those with lowest folate levels had 16 percent higher risk of having asthma than people with the highest folate levels.
Blacks and Hispanics had lower blood folate levels -12 and 12.5 nanograms per milliliter, respectively – than whites (15 ng/ml), but the differences were not due to income and socio-economic status.
The Hopkins team is planning a study comparing the effects of folic acid and placebo in people with allergies and asthma.
Asthma affects more than 7 percent of adults and children in the United States, and is the most common chronic condition among children, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Environmental allergies are estimated to affect 25 million Americans, according to the CDC.

Comments
October 1st, 2009 at 10:54 am
Having read a few of the articles since arriving to this site;I’m struck by how little is known after all these years. As my mother told me, I suffered debilitating migraines from the age of two and a half. Through public school, I can only say that it was pretty much a blur due to the headaches.
These headaches continued throughout my life and then suddenly disappeared just prior to concieving our daughter and when she was ten, a reaction to msg and downing a bottle of liquid tylenol with her cradling my head in her arms, I began to see a definate link between food additives, preservatives and the like and migraines.
Putting the aforementioned into our bodies puts us in a state of disease or out of balance.
Now in menopause and using patch estrogen therapy, those migraines are back and now worse due to Post Concussion Syndrome.
In Sept. 1991 after going into hospital to laser a stone and to be dicharged from day surgery; my stay was about nine days. A hole (perferataion) was blasted through the ureter and the sone smashed sideways into a multitude of pieces and backflushed and imbedded into the kidney and eight IVP dyes adminitered between july,1991 and early sept., 1991 (should only administer about 2 – 3 a year and should be 4-6 months apart.) All that has left me with Loin Pain Hematuria of both kidneys and another name for it is Migraine of the Kidney. End result is sometimes and I shudder at the prospect and it does occurr in tandem with migraine of the head.
So, yes, I do believe that natural supplements are beneficial and I have used such with great success. To heal the scar in the uretur, I used massive doses of natural source vitamin E, and to prevent further stone formation where possible, as I was figuring out what to do at home. I measured the calcium and magnesium in everything I ate and also supplemented magnesium where it was low through the powdered form. Due to massive full body hives had to go to a homeopath to balance my body’s PH. Prior to that I could not eat anything that had a preservative or additive in it.
Also detoxified the liver with liquied milk thistle after every meal and snack.
I realize some are side issues, however, through the process they are all relative.
For you fellow sufferers out there, I know some of what you may be going thru,
Take Care and Be Well,
glenna or multiplicity hall
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