Hygiene Hypothesis
Principles
- Allergy, Parasites, and the Hygiene Hypothesis
- Eat dirt – the hygiene hypothesis and allergic diseases
- Maternal antibodies, childhood infections, and autoimmune disease
- Schistosoma mansoni Infection Modulates the Immune Response against Allergic and Auto-immune Diseases
- The effect of infections on susceptibility to autoimmune and allergic diseases
Specific to MS
- Association Between Parasite Infection and Immune Responses in Multiple Sclerosis
- Asthma onset prior to multiple sclerosis and the contribution of sibling exposure in early life
- Helicobacter pylori infection is a potential protective factor against conventional multiple sclerosis in the Japanese population
- Hygiene hypothesis: Innate immunity, malaria and multiple sclerosis
- Multiple sclerosis and anti-Plasmodium falciparum innate immune response
- Multiple sclerosis and the hygiene hypothesis
- The Hygiene Hypothesis and Multiple Sclerosis
- Does the “Hygiene Hypothesis” Provide an Explanation for the High Prevalence of Multiple Sclerosis in Sardinia?
- Exposure to Infant Siblings During Early Life and Risk of Multiple Sclerosis
- Immunoregulation of CNS autoimmunity by helminth and mycobacterial infections
- Prevalence of atopy in MS patients: a case-controlled study