Bacteria can be good

Published by
PTI

Exposure to pets and rural environments during childhood helps

Children raised in a rural environment, surrounded by animals and bacteria, grow up to have more stress-resilient immune systems and may be at lower risk of mental illness than pet-free city dwellers, according to a study.

The study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) adds to mounting evidence supporting the “hygiene hypothesis,” which posits that overly sterile environments can breed health problems.

The researchers from the University of Ulm in Germany and the University of Colorado (CU) Boulder in the US also suggest that raising kids around pets might be good for mental health, for reasons people might not expect.

“It has already been very well documented that exposure to pets and rural environments during development is beneficial in terms of reducing risk of asthma and allergies later in life,” said Christopher Lowry, a professor at CU Boulder.

“This study moves the conversation forward by showing for the first time in humans that these same exposures are likely to be important for mental health,” said Lowry.

The scientists recruited 40 healthy German men between 20 and 40 years old. Half had grown up on a farm with farm animals. Half had grown up in a large city without pets.

On test day, all were asked to give a speech in front of a group of stone-faced observers and then asked to solve a difficult math problem while being timed.

Blood and saliva were taken five minutes before and five, 15, 60, 90 and 120 minutes after the test.

Those who grew up in cities had significantly higher levels of immune system components called peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) after the stressful experience.

They also showed prolonged elevation of the inflammatory compound interleukin 6 and muted activation of the anti-inflammatory compound interleukin 10.

“People who grew up in an urban environment had a much-exaggerated induction of the inflammatory immune response to the stressor, and it persisted throughout the two-hour period,” Lowry said.

Surprisingly, while their bodies launched a hair-trigger response to the stress, the city kids reported feeling less stressed than their rural counterparts did.

“This exaggerated inflammatory response is like a sleeping giant that they are completely unaware of,” Lowry said.

Previous studies have shown that those with an exaggerated inflammatory response are more likely to develop depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) later in life.

Research has also shown that our immunoregulatory response to stress develops in early life and is shaped largely by our microbial environment. n

PTI

Published by
PTI

Recent Posts

‘World Santoor Day’ – An evening of Santoor recitals

Solo recitals by renowned Santoor exponents will highlight the cultural legacy of the instrument on…

June 21, 2026

Delhi: Two held in Rs 80 lakh online investment fraud; stocks worth Rs 25 lakh frozen

Investigators say the accused routed part of the cheated money into stock market instruments, helping…

June 21, 2026

Dipke, CJP supporters continue sit-in overnight at Jantar Mantar, urge people to join protest

Overnight sit-in at Jantar Mantar enters second day as Abhijeet Dipke seeks public support and…

June 21, 2026

Delhi LG, CM take part in yoga sessions; Sandhu praises women’s leading role in movement

Delhi leaders joined Yoga Day events across the city, with LG Taranjit Singh Sandhu highlighting…

June 21, 2026

Security beefed up across Delhi for NEET re-examination

Special cooling zones, free DTC travel and enhanced security arrangements put in place to ensure…

June 21, 2026

Light rain likely in Delhi; mercury may touch 39°C

Delhi records a warm start to the day at 28.8°C; IMD forecasts light rain and…

June 21, 2026