Allergic disease affects more than one in five Australian children. What foods a mother eats during pregnancy and breastfeeding, as well as when to introduce solid foods to babies, is thought to be critical in reducing the increasing burden of allergies in our Australian community. I hope to use this fellowship to discover what dietary factors put children at risk of developing a food allergy, and ways we can reduce that risk.
Anaphylaxis: Pathophysiology, Acute Management, Diagnosis And Immunotherapy.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$380,558.00
Summary
Anaphylaxis is a serious allergic reaction that is rapid in onset and may cause death. This award will support research projects that aim to improve both the emergency care of this condition and subsequent immunotherapy (desensitisation) for people who experience anaphylaxis to insect sting. It will also support research to better understand anaphylaxis to antivenoms, which is a major problem worldwide, and to thus improve the treatment of snake, scorpion and spider envenoming.
Food allergies have emerged as a major public health concern affecting 1 in 10 Australian infants. Hospitals waiting times are in excess of 12-months for specialist services. Recent changes in the environment are driving up rates of food allergy but the mechanisms are unclear. Epigenetics is the science of how the environment influences gene behaviour. This fellowship will address the important and urgent question of how modern environments are changing our genes, leading to food allergy.
Epidemiology Of Allergic Diseases And The Role Of Early Life Eczema
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$416,306.00
Summary
Eczema prevents our children from getting a healthy start to life, increases their risk of developing asthma and hay-fever, and we don’t know how to prevent this condition. Dr. Lowe will help identify causes and the outcomes of eczema and allergic diseases in early life, by using a number of important research projects. This research includes an intervention trial that aims to prevent the development of allergic disease and sensitisation, which Dr Lowe leads
Ontogeny Of Toll (TLR) Function In Normal And Allergic Children: The Impact Of Microbial-rich Environments
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$387,489.00
Summary
Reduced exposure to bacteria during early life has become a leading candidate to explain the escalating rate of allergic disease. Despite this, the development and maturation of the pathways involved in normal recognition of bacteria in children has not been explored. In this proposal we set out to address this critical shortcoming in both normal and allergic children. Mapping normal maturation of such pathways will help us to identify better early markers of allergic disease.
Immunological Mechanisms And Management Of Serious Illness And Injury
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$334,539.00
Summary
This fellowship will improve outcomes for seriously ill and injured people, in particular anaphylaxis (life-threatening severe allergy), sepsis (infection) and severe brain injury. Novel laboratory research will be brought to the emergency bedside and integrated with clinical trials aimed at improving outcomes from these conditions. As well as providing immediate benefits in terms of understanding disease processes, this research will pave the way for new therapeutic approaches in the future.