Author:
Motoki Noriko,Inaba Yuji,Toubou Hirokazu,Hasegawa Kohei,Shibazaki Takumi,Tsukahara Teruomi,Nomiyama Tetsuo,Kamijima Michihiro,Yamazaki Shin,Ohya Yukihiro,Kishi Reiko,Yaegashi Nobuo,Hashimoto Koichi,Mori Chisato,Ito Shuichi,Yamagata Zentaro,Inadera Hidekuni,Nakayama Takeo,Sobue Tomotaka,Shima Masayuki,Nakamura Hiroshige,Suganuma Narufumi,Kusuhara Koichi,Katoh Takahiko,
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
This investigation assessed the impact of dog and/or cat ownership during infancy on the presence of functional constipation (FC) at 3 years of age.
Methods
The fixed data of 73,936 singleton births from a large national birth cohort study commencing in 2011 were used to identify FC as estimated by Rome III at 3 years of age. Multiple logistic regression analysis was employed to search for correlations between FC development and dog and/or cat ownership in early childhood.
Results
A total of 8,459 toddlers (11.6%) met the Rome III criteria for FC at 3 years of age. Overall, 57,264 (77.5%) participants had never owned a dog or cat. We identified 7,715 (10.4%) infant-period owners, 1,295 (1.8%) current owners, and 7,762 (10.5%) long-term owners. Multivariate analysis showed that infant-period ownership remained significantly associated with the risk of developing FC at 3 years of age after adjusting for covariates (adjusted OR [95% CI] 1.09 [1.01–1.19] based on non-ownership).
Conclusions
This Japanese large nationwide survey uncovered a possible adverse effect of infant-period dog and/or cat ownership prior to 6 months of age on FC status at 3 years of age.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health