Table of contents
- See also VitaminDWiki: Vitamin D treats asthma
- Maternal intake of sugar during pregnancy and childhood respiratory and atopic outcomes] July 2017
- Prenatal and Early-Life Fructose, Fructose-Containing Beverages, and Mid-Childhood Asthma - Dec 2017
- VitaminDWiki pages with SUGAR in title (8 as of June 2022)
See also VitaminDWiki: Vitamin D treats asthma
- Overview Asthma and Vitamin D
- Childhood asthma problems eliminated for months by 600,000 IU of Vitamin D injection – June 2017
- Asthma reduced 60 percent with vitamin D supplementation – meta-analysis 2014, 2015
- Why deficiencies in vitamin D and magnesium are linked to asthma
Note: high fructose corn syrup used in dietary drinks uses up 2X more Magnesium than does sugar - Cola Soft Drinks reduce Calcium and vitamin D
Maternal intake of sugar during pregnancy and childhood respiratory and atopic outcomes] July 2017
published by European Respiratory Society
- “After controlling for potential confounders, maternal intake of free sugar was positively associated with atopy (OR for highest versus lowest quintile of sugar intake 1.38, 95% CI 1.06–1.78; per quintile p-trend=0.006) and atopic asthma (OR 2.01, 95% CI 1.23–3.29; per quintile p-trend=0.004). These associations were not confounded by intake of sugar in early childhood, which was unrelated to these outcomes.”
2X increase in atopic asthma if > 60 grams of sugar daily during pregnancy
"Atopy refers to the genetic tendency to develop allergic diseases such as allergic rhinitis, asthma and atopic dermatitis (eczema)." from Google
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Prenatal and Early-Life Fructose, Fructose-Containing Beverages, and Mid-Childhood Asthma - Dec 2017
Annals of the American Thoracic Society https://doi.org/10.1513/AnnalsATS.201707-530OC PubMed: 29219619
Lakiea S Wright ; Sheryl L Rifas-Shiman , Emily Oken , Augusto A Litonjua ; Diane R Gold ;
Rationale: Cross-sectional studies have linked intake of high fructose corn syrup sweetened beverages with asthma in school children.
Objective: To examine associations of maternal prenatal and early childhood intake of sugar sweetened beverages and fructose with current asthma in mid-childhood (median 7.7years).
Methods: We assessed maternal pregnancy (1st and 2nd trimester average) and child (median 3.3 years) intake of sugar sweetened beverages and total fructose using food frequency questionnaires in 1068 mother-child pairs from Project Viva, a prospective pre-birth cohort. In a multivariable analysis, we examined associations of quartiles of maternal and child sugar sweetened beverage, juice, and total fructose intake with child current asthma in mid-childhood, assessed by questionnaire as ever doctor-diagnosed asthma plus taking asthma medications or reporting wheezing in the past 12 months.
Results: Higher maternal pregnancy sugar sweetened beverage consumption (mean 0.6 servings/day; range 0-5) was associated with younger maternal age, non-white race/ethnicity, lower education and income, and higher pre-pregnancy BMI. Adjusting for pre-pregnancy BMI and other covariates, comparing quartile 4 v. quartile 1, higher maternal pregnancy intake of
- sugar sweetened beverages (OR 1.70; 95%CI 1.08, 2.67) and
- total fructose (OR 1.58; 0.98, 2.53)
were associated with greater odds of mid-childhood current asthma (prevalence=19%). Higher early childhood fructose intake (quartile 4 v. quartile 1) was also associated with mid-childhood current asthma in models adjusted for maternal sugar sweetened beverages (OR 1.79; 1.07, 2.97) and after additional adjustment for mid-childhood BMI z-score (OR 1.77; 1.06, 2.95).
Conclusion: Higher sugar sweetened beverage and fructose intake during pregnancy and in early childhood may influence childhood asthma development, in part through mechanisms apart from adiposity.
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VitaminDWiki pages with SUGAR in title (8 as of June 2022)
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