FEAT DAILY NEWSLETTER Sacramento, California

and THE AUTISM NETWORK http://www.feat.org

"Healing Autism: No Finer a Cause on the Planet" ________________________________________________________________

April 10, 2002 Autism Database Search www.feat.org/search/news.asp

CARE

* Committees Approve $17.2 Million Increase For Autism Care in Calif.

PUBLIC HEALTH

* A Look at Mercury Fillings: Fill It Up, But With What?

AWARENESS

* A Quick Reference Primer on Autism from FEAT Newsletter Archives

Committees Approve $17.2 Million Increase For Autism Care in California

[This increase for autism care comes at a time when California, like most other states, is experiencing drastic budget deficits and in the face of the Governor's proposed (and rejected) $52 million cut in care for those with other disabilities. This report comes from autism advocate Rick Rollens. Rollens is also a political consultant for California's Regional Centers and the M.I.N.D. Institute. -LS]

On Monday, both the California Senate and Assembly Budget subcommittees on health and human services unanimously approved a requested increase in the Governor's 2002-2003 California State Budget of $17.2 million in purchase of services funds to the Regional Centers to recognize increased expenditures attributable to the caseload growth of individuals with autism entering California's developmental services system in record numbers and the corresponding utilization of intensive services. Since both subcommittees of the Legislature have approved this item, it will not become a "conference item" and will be presented to the Governor as part of the full State Budget in June.

The committees acted, in part, due to information provided by the Department of Developmental Services that said the entire population of individuals diagnosed with autism served by California's Regional Centers doubled in the four years between 1987 and 2001. It is estimated that 22,690 individuals with autism will be seeking services in the Budget year. (Please note that when the California Report was published in 1999 and reported a 273% increase from 1987 through 1998, there were 2,278 persons in 1987 with autism in the system, 10,360 in 1998 and today the Department is estimating that for this Budget year there will be 22,690!).

The Department also reported that of the nearly 18,000 persons with autism currently in the system about 60% are under the age of 11 years old. (Again it is important to note that 80% of all persons with autism in California were born after 1980, the beginning of the autism epidemic, and when you include children aged 13 and under, 2 out of 3 persons in the system are between the age of 0 and 13 years old!).

Our heartfelt thanks to Senator Wesley Chesbro and Senator Deborah Ortiz, as well as Assemblymember Gil Cedillo, Assemblymember Dion Aroner, Assemblymember Judy Chu, and Assemblymember Keith Richman for their unwavering support. And a special thanks to the Department of Developmental Services and the Association of Regional Center Agencies. And lastly, once again our Governor, Gray Davis, has provided leadership and financial support for the autism cause. We are eternally grateful to him for his undying support for this item as well as his support of the M.I.N.D. Institute.

 

 

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* * *

A Look at Mercury Fillings: Fill It Up, But With What?

Dentists divided over safety of 'silver' fillings but more are turning to other methods

[By David Wahlberg in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.] http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/living/0409mercury.html

Pamela MacArthur was a healthy artist who loved to ballroom dance when a trio of bizarre symptoms stopped the music.

Her body suddenly started to twitch, she had nightmares and her face erupted in boils so painful that it hurt to roll over in bed and touch the pillow.

Doctors suggested drugs for acne and psychological disorders, but MacArthur turned instead to her dentist. He removed nine metal fillings and replaced them with plastic substitutes, and soon she was doing the tango again.

MacArthur, 40, of Alpharetta is one of a growing number of people who believe their medical problems are caused by mercury in dental fillings. Even though dentists often refer to metal fillings as "silver," they are an amalgam of half mercury and the other half a mixture of silver, copper, tin and zinc.

The dental community is sharply divided over whether mercury in fillings is harmful. The American Dental Association stands firmly behind such fillings, saying they only rarely cause problems, in people with mercury allergies, and are more durable than the alternatives. Meanwhile, a legion of "mercury-free" dentists insists that their mercury-using colleagues are slowly poisoning patients because the fillings release the element into the blood. Research findings are mixed.

Lawmakers are starting to say that patients have a right to hear about the pros and cons of mercury fillings. A bill introduced in the Georgia Legislature in March would require dentists to tell patients about the risks of, and alternatives to, the fillings. The bill, by Rep. Bob Holmes (D-Atlanta), also would ban mercury fillings in children and in women age 45 or younger. Last fall, a California congresswoman announced a bill to ban dental mercury nationwide.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is proposing to strengthen its dental mercury regulations with new guidelines for labeling and reporting of side effects, and the National Institutes of Health is spending $9 million for two large studies of mercury fillings in chidlren.

Last week, lawsuits were filed against dental groups on behalf of nine Georgia children with autism, claiming that mercury from their mothers' fillings caused the disease and arguing that dentists deceive patients by calling the fillings "silver." Suits in California and Maryland have accused the American Dental Association of imposing a "gag rule" forbidding anti-mercury dentists from having open discussions with patients.

Caught in the middle are the patients, who don't know whether to rush out and get rid of those shiny spots in their teeth. Some dentists suggest that symptomatic people such as MacArthur, who may have a mercury allergy, should consider getting fillings removed. This is even more true if fillings are old and need to be replaced anyway.

But because removing fillings can actually release more mercury into the body temporarily, the procedure is more risky for people who feel fine.

What is clear is that mercury fillings do release small amounts of colorless, odorless mercury vapor into the bodies of the 100 million Americans who have them, especially after chewing food or brushing teeth. And mercury is a known neurotoxin. The question is whether the emissions are high enough to cause health problems.

Giving 'false hope'

Dr. Michael Ziff, a retired dentist who fought a four-year legal battle over mercury with the dental board in Florida, is now executive director of the Orlando-based International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology, a leading anti-mercury group that has about 400 dentist members. The average American has seven mercury fillings, Ziff said. "It's kind of like holding seven leaking mercury thermometers in your mouth 365 days a year, 24 hours a day."

Dr. Rod Mackert, a dentistry professor at the Medical College of Georgia and one of the ADA's main spokesmen on the issue, said the fillings emit from 1 to 3 micrograms of mercury a day, while people take in 5 to 6 micrograms a day through food, water and air. The ADA prohibits its members from suggesting that patients have fillings removed, though members can comply if a patient requests it.

Mercury fillings have been used for at least 150 years, Mackert said.

"It is unethical to allow the removal of fillings for the curing of any disease, because there is no evidence linking it to systemic disease," he said. "It would be giving the patient a false hope."

A January survey by the Chicago-based Dental Products Report found that 20 percent of dentists no longer use mercury fillings. Among those who do, two-thirds use them in fewer than half the fillings they place.

Dentists who frequently remove mercury fillings, such as Dr. Ron Dressler of Norcross, usually do so for patients who are referred by doctors who treat chronic pain. The doctors run hair or urine tests to detect mercury levels, and high amounts lead to a suggestion to remove fillings.

Dressler performs another test to determine how much mercury vapor is in the mouth. Holding a boxy instrument, he scrapes a straw-like device around the gums, and the detector registers the gas.

Mercury fillings are generally removed in groups, one-fourth of the mouth at a time. They're usually replaced with composite fillings of reinforced plastic resin or, sometimes, with other materials such as gold or porcelain. During metal filling extraction, dentists use vaccuums, air filters, eye covers, oxygen masks and rubber dams over teeth to protect the patient from exposure to excess mercury.

But the process can increase the body's mercury load before decreasing it. To reduce systemic mercury, patients are advised to use some form of chelation, in which drugs that bind to metals are taken orally or intravenously, eliminating the metals through the urine.

Dr. Mark Merlin, a physician at the Atlanta Center for Alternative Medicine in Dunwoody, who tests many patients for mercury, said chelation is crucial when fillings are removed. "You have to get [the mercury] out of the body; it's been leaking into the body for years."

Merlin prescribes amino acids, herbs, vitamin C and intravenous drips of DMPS, a chelating agent. The treatments cost at least $1,000 over several months and often aren't covered by insurance. Health plans generally cover the cost of about $100 per mercury filling, but they often don't pay the additional cost of plastic fillings. Those fillings may run $150 or more.

'Time bomb' in mouth?

Many patients who have had their mercury fillings removed and undergone chelation say the process is worth the price. MacArthur, the ballroom dancer, had her fillings out nearly three years ago. Her nightmares and body twitches disappeared immediately, and her facial boils gradually went away.

"I had a time bomb ticking in my mouth," she said. "You could never convince me that it wasn't mercury."

Hyacinth Meeks, a patient of Merlin's, had a similar experience. Plagued by migraines that made her head throb when she walked even a block, Meeks became frustrated with doctors who put her on mind-numbing sedatives and painkillers. Her dentist was at first reluctant to take out her seven fillings but eventually agreed.

"Within six months, there were no headaches," said Meeks, 48, of Austell, an office manager for an Atlanta wood products firm. "It has totally changed my life."

Felicia Gaston of McDonough believes that her 3-year-old daughter Tylicia's autism was caused by mercury in fillings that seeped into breast milk. She is one of the plaintiffs in the Georgia lawsuits.

"I should have been aware" that metal fillings contain mercury, Gaston said. "I feel like her life has been taken away from her."

Some mercury-free dentists say they're treated like pariahs by their peers, and many are unwilling to speak publicly for fear of reprisal. Dr. Wayne King, a Marietta dentist who opposes mercury, said that, several years ago, the Georgia Board of Dentistry threatened to punish him after he ran a newspaper ad depicting a skull and crossbones with the questions, "Is there poison in your mouth? Do you have symptoms of mercury poisoning?"

King was merely given a letter of reprimand, he said, and records show no official sanctions against him by the dental board. But to King, the don't-rock-the-boat message was clear. "They're afraid to let patients know what we're doing to them," he declared.

Conflicting research

The research is inconclusive, with studies both suggesting and seemingly refuting links to various ailments. The debate even divides

institutions: One chemistry study at the University of Kentucky found a relationship between dental mercury and the conditions leading to Alzheimer's disease, while another report at the same school, relying on brain autopsies, found no connection. Research by University of Georgia microbiologist Anne Summers suggests that mercury from dental fillings makes the body more resistant to some antibiotics.

Yet some studies indicate that plastic fillings also may leak hazardous substances into the body, such as xenoestrogens that can disrupt cell activity, said Mackert, the professor and mercury supporter. "Everything has a theoretical risk," he said.

The U.S. Public Health Service says there is no evidence to support claims of adverse effects from mercury fillings except in cases of allergy.

A few countries, such as Sweden and Denmark, recommend that dentists try to use alternative fillings, especially for children and pregnant women. Arizona, California, Colorado and Maine have laws requiring dentists to explain potential mercury risks to patients, said Charles Brown, a lawyer with Consumers for Dental Choice. Brown, a former attorney general of West Virginia, has represented the group in lawsuits in California and Maryland contending that the dental profession threatens dentists who oppose mercury and deceives patients by referring to fillings as "silver."

Last year, the California State Assembly disbanded the state's dental board over the mercury issue. A state senator who took part in that action, Democrat Diane Watson, is now a U.S. representative and, in November, announced a bill calling for stricter warnings, an inmediate ban on mercury fillings in children and pregnant women, and an eventual ban for everyone.

In February, the FDA announced a proposal to upgrade dental mercury from a Class 1 to a Class 2 medical device, which would require the makers of metal fillings to list all product ingredients on labels and encourage dentists and patients to report side effects.

Mackert said patients should ask their dentists about mercury fillings if they're concerned. Most dentists will say the fillings are safe and more durable than plastics, especially for large fillings, but they may grant a patient's request for an alternative.

And a sea change may be beginning. When Mackert needed repair of a tiny mercury filling a few weeks ago, he went with plastic.

THE FILLINGS FILE

A look at the three main materials dentists use for fillings:

Metal

An amalgam of mercury, silver, copper, tin and zinc.

Cost: About $100, usually covered by insurance.

Durability: 8 to 10 years.

Pros: Relatively easy to put in; has a long history of use.

Cons: Small amounts of mercury leak into the body, possibly causing health problems.

Plastic

A composite of reinforced plastic resin and other materials.

Cost: About $150; patients often pay the $50 or so over the cost of metal.

Durability: 5 to 7 years.

Pros: Looks like natural teeth; may have fewer health risks; especially useful for small fillings.

Cons: Takes longer to put in; is more expensive; plastic resins may also leak into the body.

Gold

Compacted or inlayed gold.

Cost: $300 or more, generally not covered by insurance.

Durability: 20 years or more.

Pros: Few health risks; long lasting.

 

 

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>> DO SOMETHING ABOUT AUTISM NOW <<

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* * *

A Quick Reference Primer on Autism from FEAT Newsletter Archives

From the FEAT Daily Newsletter archives comes this quick reference list of introductory primers on a variety of topics related to autism in some fashion made up mostly from credible news reports. This "A Look at . . ." series is continually updated and added to as the latest information appears in the FEAT Newsletter.

At first glance at the list, the autism novice might ask what does AIDS and Alzheimer's have to do with autism. There are a few things, as an example.

New knowledge about the immune system gained from AIDs research may be useful in the search for the cause and treatment of Autism. Alzheimer's research may give us more clues to the neural aspects of the disorder. There is also a medical-political component as there is some competition for research dollars. Education issues spread across the various disabilities. Often we see regular education and special education competing for resources, too. Autism touches our lives in many ways. The FEAT Newsletter looks to cover all of them.

Each readable item, which has been previously posted in the newsletter, has a referring URL address for further research on the topic.

Reading the entire list is a two to three hour exercise, which should leave the student with a good-start up-to-date overview of autism and related issues.

This index list is also a good candidate for mention in print newsletters and resource handbooks for parents.

Any autism-related subjects can be searched for at our newsletter archives. The website address for it is: http://www.feat.org/search/news.asp -- it is on every FEAT Newsletter posting, next to the date.

 

From the

"A Look at . . . " Series

ADHD: The Boy Who Didn't Get Ritalin

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9904D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R2

AIDS - That Other Immune Disease Epidemic

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9905D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1996

Alzheimer's

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0001D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R2474&m=596

Amygdala and Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0110&L=FEATNEWS&P=R335&m=1920

Aspergers

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9901B&L=FEATNEWS&P=R877

Autism Link Page

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9907D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R694

Autoimmune Theories of Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0010&L=FEATNEWS&P=R7728&m=1323

Brain - Part I

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9903D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1384

Brain - Part II

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9903D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1771

Brain – Part III Cerebral Cortex, Brain Waves, Chemical Activity

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9903E&L=FEATNEWS&P=R138

Brain and Pheromones

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9903E&L=FEATNEWS&P=R367

Cerebral Palsy

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9905A&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1036

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Hits Women / Rice Beverage Recalled

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0002A&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1652&m=596

Crohn's Disease - Differs by Gender

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9905D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R253

Down Syndrome

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9904E&L=FEATNEWS&P=R354

Drug Treatments for Depression

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9912E&L=FEATNEWS&P=R488&m=596

EdLaw Center: Special Ed. Law Site

http://www.edlaw.net/frames.html

Facilitated Communication

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9902D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R80

Fast ForWord: Retraining Your Brain

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9907A&L=FEATNEWS&P=R2

Free Sulphate Theory and Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0010&L=FEATNEWS&P=R6917&m=1323

Gene Therapy

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9907C&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1308

Genetic Testing

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9907D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R2

Genetics of Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0009B&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1550&m=1323

Gluten/Casein, Dietary Theories

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9907A&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1167

Human Genome Initiative

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9911D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R660&m=596

Landau-Kleffner Syndrome

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9901D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R2

'Leaky Gut' Theories of Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0010&L=FEATNEWS&P=R7978&m=1323

Memory

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0001A&L=FEATNEWS&P=R2818&m=596

Mercury Amalgam Toxicity

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0107&L=FEATNEWS&P=R10883&m=1920

The Miller Method - A Cognitive-Developmental Systems Approach to Therapy

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0012&L=FEATNEWS&P=R7165&m=1323

Opioid Excess Theories Causing Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9906C&L=FEATNEWS&P=R815

Peer-Review System: Pique and Critique

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0107&L=FEATNEWS&P=R7692&m=1920

Prednisone in Treating Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0006A&L=FEATNEWS&P=R2&m=596

'Refrigerator Moms'

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9903D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1384

Savants (with Autism and Without)

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9903D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R321

Schizophrenia

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9903D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1011

Seizure Disorders

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0110&L=FEATNEWS&P=R5155&m=1920

Siblings - Giving a Voice

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0003D&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1179&m=596

Special Needs Trusts

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0107&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1335&m=1920

Speech & Language: Talk to Me

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9910B&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1161&m=596

TEACCH - An Intervention System for Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9909E&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1046&m=596

Theory of Mind

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0104&L=FEATNEWS&P=R484&m=1323

Vaccinations and Autism Theories

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0011&L=FEATNEWS&P=R4099&m=1323

Vaccinations: How They Work

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9909C&L=FEATNEWS&P=R623&m=596

Vaccinations: How They Work – Addendum

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9909C&L=FEATNEWS&P=R1395&m=596

Viral Infection Theory of Autism

http://www.feat.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0202&L=FEATNEWS&P=R9779&m=1920

 

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APRIL 21, 2002 - 12 Noon to 5pm

THIRD NATIONAL AUTISM AWARENESS RALLY:

"The Power of ONE! I.D.E.A."

FREE and OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

www.unlockingautism.org

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FEAT'S "Night of Caring" April 27

Sacramento FEAT is holding its' 9th Annual "Night of Caring" Dinner and Auction fundraiser on April 27, 2002. If you have been helped by the FEAT and the Daily Newsletter and would like to show your appreciation you can by supporting our fundraiser. Make an auction contribution or sponsorship donation. Please call 916-843-1536 for more information. Thank you.

FEAT is a tax-exempt non-profit corporation

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Lenny Schafer, Editor@feat.org • CALENDAR EVENTS@feat.org Michelle Guppy

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