A study of mercury levels in the baby hair of children who were later
diagnosed with autism has produced startling results. The babies had far lower
levels of mercury in their hair than other infants, leading to speculation that
autistic children either do not absorb mercury or, more likely, cannot excrete
it.
The results will be seized upon by parents who blame vaccines containing the
mercury-based preservative thimerosal for their children's autism, some of whom
are suing health authorities in the US and Canada. (The MMR vaccine that some
accuse of triggering autism, despite a lack of credible evidence, does not
contain mercury.) But while the study's findings support the theory that some
children have a genetic fault that makes them far more susceptible to mercury
poisoning, the results certainly do not prove this, or that thimerosal is
involved. The difference in mercury levels in hair may be a sign of a more
general problem in dealing with metals or it could simply be an anomaly that
reveals little about what is happening elsewhere in the body.
But if the results are confirmed, the conclusions of studies looking at the
safety of low levels of mercury (New Scientist, 14 June, p 7) could also be
called into question. Many of these studies relied on mercury levels in hair as
a measure of exposure. Autism experts say the findings are intriguing, but all
emphasise the need for further studies. Although the findings are to be
published in a peer-reviewed journal, some critics say the results are rather
too striking, and point out that the researchers who did the work all believe
that thimerosal is to blame for autism.
The team leader, Louisiana doctor Amy Holmes, in fact set out to try to prove
that autistic children had been exposed to high levels of mercury. She obtained
baby hair from parents who had kept the first cuttings and sent off a few
samples for analysis. To her surprise, mercury levels were low.
Holmes has now done a bigger study, comparing mercury levels in first baby
haircuts from 94 autistic children with those of 45 other children. The mean
level in the baby hair of children later diagnosed as autistic was 0.47 parts
per million, compared with 3.63 ppm in the others, the team found- nearly a
tenth lower. What's more, the more severe the autism, the lower the mercury
levels. The mean levels of children with mild, moderate and severe autism were
0.79, 0.46 and 0.21 ppm respectively.
Most of this mercury came from the mothers. The main sources of exposure,
according to the team, were mercury amalgam fillings, Rho D immunoglobulin
injections containing thimerosal given to Rhesus negative mothers, and heavy
consumption of fish (defined as more than five fish meals a month). In the
control group, hair mercury rose in line with the mothers' exposure. But the
baby hair of autistic children had consistently low mercury levels, even when
the mothers' exposure was high, the team found. The results will appear in the
International Journal of Toxicology in September.
One explanation, says team member Mark Blaxill of the campaign group
SafeMinds of Cambridge, Massachusetts, is a problem with metal uptake. If so,
autistic children might also be deficient in metals essential for brain
development such as zinc, iron and copper. Alternatively, some children may have
a problem excreting mercury. The metal might then build up in the brain,
producing autism. Most mercury is excreted in urine and faeces, but the lack of
mercury in hair might be a sign that the metal is being retained in cells rather
than getting into the blood, the researchers suggest.
Mercury is one of the suspected causes of autism, with proponents arguing
that there many similarities between autism and mercury poisoning. But a review
published earlier this year pointed out that poisoning by the different forms of
mercury found in fish, fillings and thimerosal has effects distinct from autism,
and concluded that what little evidence there is does not support any link.
Despite this, some doctors, including Holmes, have been experimenting with
giving autistic children metal-binding agents, or chelators, to rid the body of
heavy metals. "They are loaded to the gills with metals," Holmes, who was
unavailable for comment, claimed last year. The only published evidence,
however, is a very small study from 1976 suggesting autistic children have
higher levels of lead in their blood.
Critics such as child neurologist Emanuel Dicicco-Bloom of the Robert Wood
Johnson Medical School in New Jersey says concluding that autistic children
accumulate mercury on the basis of low levels in hair is a big logical leap that
is not justified by the evidence. Even some of those who blame heavy metals such
as mercury for autism echo his warnings not to try potentially dangerous
therapies such as chelation. Parents should wait for the results of the clinical
trials about to begin, they say.
And Dicicco-Bloom's colleague Mike Gochfield, who does mercury testing, says
that the levels of mercury in the control group are way above what he would
expect for children in the US. Blaxill's response is that no one has ever tested
first baby haircuts before, so there are no "normal" results to compare to. The
lab that did the testing was not told which children the samples were from, he
adds.
And according to unpublished work by Steve Lindow and Steve Haslow at the
University of Hull in the UK, hair mercury levels in newborns can be even higher
than in the mother. They suspect that mothers may actively transport metals to
the fetus. But on average the first baby hair in Holmes' study was cut at 18
months old, so this would not explain the high levels in the controls.
Astonishingly, only one other published study, from 1985, has compared
mercury levels in the hair of children with and without autism. That study found
no difference, but it did find lower levels of metals such as calcium, copper
and chromium - levels that were so distinctive they could be used as a
"diagnostic tool for autism".
Other experts say the theory that autistic children are particularly at risk
from heavy metals is at least plausible. "This kind of gene-environment
interaction is not incompatible with the known heritability of autism," says
Simon Baron-Cohen of Cambridge University. "If these results hold up, metal
studies on the brain could be revealing."
###
New Scientist issue: 21 June 2003
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