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One Animal Study Raises Questions about Multiple Vaccinations
and Anthrax Susceptibility
Why Did HHS Fund the
Study But Not Follow Up?
Neenyah Ostrom --
10/31/2001
Editor's Note: Chronicillnet.org is taking a
position on the proposed anthrax vaccinations of civilians because vaccines
are so closely linked to chronic disorders. This website is using the
resources of the Internet to inform the public about the continuing
misrepresentations made by the media and government health officials by
pointing out peer reviewed scientific studies that contradict many of the
statements made about vaccines that are either false or supported by poorly
conducted scientific studies.
Following the diagnosis of several cases of anthrax among people who'd had
contact with deliberately-contaminated pieces of mail (or mail handling
equipment), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced on
October 26 that "high risk" civilian workers may soon receive
anthrax vaccine, previously reserved for members of the Armed Forces. The
civilians currently scheduled for anthrax vaccination include "high
risk" laboratory workers and decontamination specialists. CDC deputy
director of science and public health Dr. David Fleming told CNN
that the program may be expanded to include some postal workers among those
individuals thought to be under "constant exposure" to anthrax. The
human anthrax vaccine currently in use is manufactured by the BioPort Corp (Lansing, Michigan).
Is it a good idea to dramatically increase the number of people who receive
the anthrax vaccine? Although health
officials continue to assert that the vaccine is both safe and effective,
numerous individual
soldiers blame the anthrax vaccine for health problems ranging from
multiple organ damage and severe weight loss to neurological damage and total
disability.
Even if enough anthrax vaccine were made available to civilian workers at
risk of "constant exposure" to anthrax, would it be safe to
vaccinate them?
Is the Anthrax Vaccine Safe and Effective?
Anthrax is an animal disease produced by a bacterium that is generally
sensitive to numerous antibiotics. It has been intensely studied by both military
and civilian
health officials because of its potential use as a biological weapon. Until
October 2001, the only Americans known to have contracted anthrax worked with
infected animals or animal skins, generally contracting the skin (cutaneous)
form of the disease from touching the infected animal or its skin. Inhalation
anthrax -- breathed into the lungs -- is a rarer, and far deadlier, version
of the illness but, like cutaneous anthrax, it can be successfully treated
with antibiotics. (The third type of anthrax, gastric, is contracted by
eating meat from an infected animal and is extremely rare.)
Vaccine Causes Anthrax in Three Animals
In nature, anthrax primarily affects ruminants: goats, cattle, sheep, horses,
camels, and llamas. A study that examined the effects of administering an
anthrax vaccine to llamas found that, in the presence of multiple vaccines to
numerous diseases, young llamas were susceptible to anthrax originating
from the vaccine itself.
The study
examined 20 llamas given anthrax vaccine after the disease was found to have
killed three cows in an adjoining field. Researchers at the Colorado State
University College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, led by
Mark E. Cartwright, were supported by grants from the National Cancer
Institute.(1)
The vaccinated llamas ranged in age from three months to 11 years of age.
After the bovine anthrax deaths, all 20 llamas in this herd were given three
inoculations: anthrax vaccine, a vaccine against the bacterium clostridia,
and a tetanus shot. At the same time, they were also injected with the
pesticide ivermectin, which kills intestinal parasites. The three calves who
developed anthrax after receiving the three simultaneous inoculations plus
ivermectin were the youngest in the herd, three months old.
When the three calves became ill, one was treated with penicillin and
recovered. The other two sick calves were sent to the Colorado State
University Diagnostic Laboratory, where both died.
The bodies of these two calves did not exhibit the usual signs of
anthrax infection: hemorrhage, "blackberry" spleen, and bacteremia.
However, when tissue cultures of their lymph nodes, lungs, and subcutaneous
tissue were examined, they were found to contain large amounts of Bacillus
anthracis, the organism that causes anthrax. The anthrax bacteria isolated
from the llama calves killed mice injected with it, another proof that this
strain of the anthrax bacterium was lethal.
Cartwright and colleagues determined that the anthrax vaccine had caused an
"atypical infective process" that originated at the site of
injection. In other words, the anthrax vaccine itself caused the anthrax
infection that killed the llama calves.
"Stress and tissue damage from the multiple inoculations of agents could
have further lowered the resistance of the young calves," Cartwright and
colleagues suggest. They also suggest that this anthrax vaccine "should
be used only with extreme care an in face of strong 'at risk'
situations."
There are many differences between these llama calves and the adult
"high risk" workers the government is contemplating vaccinating, of
course, but there may be a disturbing commonality: All of the adults who
might be given anthrax vaccine have received numerous vaccines.
And, because the early symptoms of the deadliest form of the disease, inhalation
anthrax, are virtually impossible to distinguish from influenza, health
authorities are recommending that the general public be vaccinated against
the flu and have ordered an increased supply of this year's flu vaccine.
Study Raises Some Very Serious Questions.
Does the anthrax vaccine used in humans interact with other vaccines? In
particular, does it interact with the flu vaccine? Do any of the vaccines
mandated for the nation’s children for the past 40 years put Americans at
higher risk of contracting anthrax? Why did the National Cancer Institute or
its parent agency, the Department of Health and Human Services, fund the
llama study and then drop the ball by not following up on it? Whose job is it
to monitor the medical competency of the nation’s government health
officials?
Although officials claim that the
vaccine is safe and have 13 published studies to back up that assertion,
soldiers have reported a constellation of systemic reactions, including
rashes, fever, headache, nausea, weight loss and memory problems. Some report
developing autoimmune diseases like lupus. Women appear to experience
"adverse effects" from the six-shot vaccination program more often
than men: although they are 12 percent of anthrax vaccine recipients, women
experience 26 percent of the adverse effects reported.(2)
Some sick veterans of the Persian Gulf War suspect that the large number of
vaccines they received simultaneously with the anthrax vaccine contributed to
the development of Gulf War Syndrome. Pentagon officials deny any link
between any vaccine and the symptoms suffered by sick Gulf War vets.
Both House of Representatives Government Reform Committee Chair Dan Burton
(R-IL) and the Chair of its Subcommittee on National Security, Veterans
Affairs, and International Relations Christopher Shays (R-CT) have held
repeated hearings over the last three years on the safety of the anthrax
vaccine, which both question.
Redmond
H. Handy, Colonel, USAFR, testified at one of Congressman Shays' first
hearings on the safety of the anthrax vaccine on March 24, 1999. Colonel
Handy questioned the Pentagon's reporting of 0.0002% occurrence of systemic
adverse reactions to the anthrax vaccine, noting that Senate Staff Report
#1397 found that 43% of Gulf War veterans suffered adverse effects to the
vaccine, as well as suggesting that the anthrax vaccine be consider a
possible contributor to the development of Gulf War Syndrome.
In his opening remarks during the October 3, 2000, hearing of the Government
Reform Committee, Congressman
Burton presented a long list of reactions to the vaccine that had been
brought to his attention:
"We have received numerous reports of adverse effects from the anthrax
vaccine. Oftentimes, we hear that the illnesses are not taken seriously. One
individual was diagnosed with the flu -- for over eighteen months. Individuals
suffering with Gulf War Syndrome, suffering physical symptoms that mirror
what we are seeing with anthrax injuries, are being given psychological
evaluations and sent home. . . . Last week the media broke the news of the
death of a Bioport employee after receiving his eleventh dose of the anthrax
vaccine. His wife, Mrs. Barbara Dunn, is joining us today. We are also being
joined by Nancy Rugo, whose sister became ill after receiving the anthrax
vaccine and eventually died. Mrs. Rugo is now raising her sister’s three year
old daughter. . . ."
The anthrax illnesses and deaths experienced in Florida, New Jersey, and New
York are frightening to many in the public and of great concern to those who
make public policy. Will rushing to vaccinate "high risk" civilians
with a vaccine that may have unknown interactions with other pharmaceuticals,
including other vaccines, make the situation better or worse? That question
should be seriously considered before a civilian anthrax vaccination program
is put into place.
REFERENCES
1. Cartwright
ME, McChesney AE, and Jones RL. "Vaccination-related anthrax in
three llamas."
2. Weller, Sheila. "Did a vaccine make this woman sick?" Self,
October 2001.
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