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Epithelial Barrier Hypothesis and Its Comparison with the Hygiene Hypothesis
Summary
This review examines the epithelial barrier hypothesis as a framework for understanding the rising prevalence of chronic inflammatory conditions in industrialized societies. Researchers propose that environmental factors associated with industrialization, including exposure to microplastics and other pollutants, may damage epithelial barriers in the skin, gut, and lungs, triggering immune responses that contribute to allergic, autoimmune, and metabolic conditions. The study suggests that the epithelial barrier hypothesis builds upon and complements earlier explanations like the hygiene hypothesis.
Chronic inflammatory conditions including allergic, autoimmune, metabolic, and neuropsychiatric disorders are constantly increasing and leading to a high burden, especially in more industrialized countries. The prevalence is still on the rise in developing countries. The start of the steep increase in asthma, atopic dermatitis, and allergic rhinitis dates to the 1960s, whereas a second wave with an increase in eosinophilic gastrointestinal disease, food allergy, and drug hypersensitivity started after the 2000s. These diseases also started to appear more with neuropsychiatric and autoimmune conditions during the last few decades. Many theories have been proposed to explain this outbreak. The hygiene hypothesis was consolidated by "old friends" and biodiversity, although some gaps remained unresolved. The introduction of the epithelial barrier hypothesis gave us a new perspective to explain the effects of industrialization without environment control and health concerns creeping into our daily lives. The present review touches on the possible explanations of why epithelial barrier hypothesis covers all previous ones, which are not contradictory but mostly complementary.
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