Environmental
The hygiene hypothesis
postulates that the cause of asthma, eczema, and other
allergic diseases is an unusually clean environment. It is supported by
epidemiologic studies for asthma. The hypothesis states that exposure to
bacteria and other immune system modulators is important during development,
and missing out on this exposure increases risk for asthma and allergy.
While it has been suggested that eczema may sometimes be an allergic
reaction to the excrement from house dust mites, with up to 5% of people showing
antibodies to the mites, the overall role this plays awaits further
corroboration.
Genetic
A number of genes have been associated with eczema, one of which is filaggrin. Genome-wide studies found three new
genetic variants associated with eczema: OVOL1, ACTL9 and IL4-KIF3A.
Eczema occurs about three times more frequently
in celiac disease and about two times more
frequently in relatives of those with celiac disease, potentially indicating a genetic link between the two conditions.
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