http://www.garynull.com/Documents/autism99b2.htm
Autism : Is There a Vaccine Connection?
Part II.
Vaccination around Pregnancy.
Copyright 1999
F. Edward
Yazbak, MD, FAAP.
|
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(1,2,3,4 ) and the vaccine
manufacturers (5,6,7) have always warned against the administration of
live virus vaccines during pregnancy, and shortly prior to conception. This report describes six mothers who received live virus vaccines and one
who received a Hepatitis B vaccine during pregnancy (8) after having received an MMR booster five months prior to conception. All the children who resulted from these
pregnancies have had developmental problems,
six out seven (85%) were diagnosed with autism, and the seventh seems
to exhibit symptoms often associated with
autistic spectrum disorders. |
Note: The information on this website is not a
substitute for
diagnosis and treatment by a qualified, licensed professional.
Click here for
"Autism: Is there a Vaccine Connection: Part I"
A remarkable study
from California released in March 1999, showed a 273% increase in Autism in
that State in the last ten years. (9)
Shortly thereafter “Autism 99, A National Emergency” a
study based on the yearly reports of
The U.S. Department of Education to Congress described similarly impressive nationwide increases.(10)
Parents of
children with autism are looking for answers to questions such as:
· What could be
causing such an increase in autism in this generation of children, when autism
was so rare in the past ?
· What environmental
factors could be implicated?
· Could something
that happened to the mothers somehow predispose their children to autism?
Many parents have
reported that their children’s autistic symptoms had started shortly after they
received their MMR vaccination. Was it possible the vaccine somehow reacted
with antibodies which the child had received from his or her mother? And, if
so, could that reaction start a chain of immune events which eventually would
lead to autism?
A study was
devised to investigate whether there is any association between vaccination
with live virus vaccine and autism.
It was decided to
target mothers who had received a live virus vaccine after the age of 16,
whether or not they had an autistic child. If maternal antibodies were in any
way a factor in the children’s illness, then it would be reasonable to presume
that the higher the maternal titers the more likely they are to
precipitate the suspected immune
reactions. Late re-vaccinations were the most liable to result in higher
titers.
Women in the
target group are usually re-vaccinated for two reasons:
· They need to
fulfill requirements for higher education or employment.
· They fail to
develop protective antibodies in response to prior live virus vaccinations.
This second group
of mothers is particularly interesting, because their inability to produce
protective antibody titers may not have been due to problems with the
vaccine but rather to some immune
dysfunction in the mothers themselves which could be passed to their children.
Neither a
prospective study of the general population nor credible retrospective studies
are presently available and therefore members of vaccine groups and parents of
children with autism were contacted via e-mail, newsletters and the internet,
and asked to identify friends and relatives.
Over 280 replies
were received in 120 days. Of these, about 240 entries were complete and
accepted. They will be included in the main study, due to be published soon.
Seven situations
where a mother was vaccinated during pregnancy are reported.
Case
Reports
Case 1: Mother who had been fully
immunized received an MMR booster in College in 1985 and another during her
postgraduate training in 1988.
In 1992, she applied for employment in a
hospital and was found to be measles susceptible Because she was pregnant and
was afraid of the rubella vaccine component of the MMR, she requested and was
given the single measles vaccine. She
was carrying twins, and one died in utero at about term. A few days later, the
mother was induced (pitocin) and delivered.
The second twin, a
boy, seemed healthy at birth. He is now described by the mother as “a high need child…. vaccine affected…. and
nervous system oriented”. Mother
does not believe he is autistic yet describes several social and sensory
constellations of symptoms which could be associated with autistic spectrum
disorders. Mother has remained measles susceptible but has declined further
vaccines
Case 2: Mother received a rubella vaccine while
pregnant with her first child. This boy has autism and according to the mother,
“he seemed to lose some of the delayed skills that he already
had” after he was given the MMR vaccine.
The mother also
states : “My other two sons have a lot of
traits”.
Case 3: Mother had all three live virus
vaccines as a child and a booster as a teenager. In 1984, she was given a
measles vaccine to fulfill college requirements. When she found out that she
was pregnant she immediately contacted the health office at the college and her
own HMO physicians, who were not concerned.
Mother delivered a
boy who reportedly had poor eye contact and was less responsive than expected.
He was given his first MMR at age 16 months and according to the mother seemed
to deteriorate after that.
By age two, he was
“visibly autistic”, and the diagnosis
was made at 26 months.
Case 4: Mother received an MMR booster in June 1994
five months prior to conception. She was also given a dose of hepatitis B
vaccine on 9/1/94 and another on 10/6/94. Her third and last hepatitis B
vaccine was administered on 4/6/95,
while she was pregnant.
She delivered a boy on 8/4/95 and breast-fed
him for 8 months. The child was “normal in the first year of life except for
some digestive problems”. He
received his hepatitis B vaccines on : 9/1/95, 10/2/95 and 6/6/96 and his first
MMR at 16 months of age. He started exhibiting autistic symptoms at the
age of 18 months and lost all language
by the time he was 23 months old.
He has been
diagnosed with autism, has tested positive for Myelin Basic Protein Antibody,
and has elevated measles antibody titers. He is often severely constipated and
in need of stool softeners.
A younger brother
is developing normally and has been immunized routinely.
Case 5: Mother returned to college and was given an
MMR vaccine in March 1990. A few days later she realized she was pregnant at
the time of the vaccination. She delivered a boy in November whom she breast
fed for six months and who started exhibiting autistic symptoms at the age of
10 months.
The diagnosis of
autism was subsequently confirmed.
This boy received
his first MMR on 12/18/91, his second on 8/18/95 and his hepatitis B series in
1998. The second child, a girl, born May 1992 is in good health and has been
routinely vaccinated.
Case 6:
This mother who was born 7/18/1965 was fully immunized as a child. She
delivered her first child after a 5 ½ months gestation on December 18, 1985. The baby weighed 2 lbs. and
lived one month.
On 10/8/1987 she
delivered a daughter who reportedly has an anxiety disorder.
In April 1992, the
mother who was 13 weeks pregnant, was admitted to a hospital to undergo
cervical banding. While in the hospital she was given a rubella vaccine booster
because she was rubella-susceptible.
She delivered thirteen weeks prematurely on
July 5, 1992. The baby, a girl, weighed
1lb 11oz and remained in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit for 115 days. She
developed and was treated for sepsis, broncho-pulmonary dysplasia, and
apnea. She was also given her routine
immunizations.
On October 19, 1992 the baby had an alarming
hypotonic-hyporesponsive episode following her second set of DPT, Polio and HIB
vaccines.
She was discharged from the hospital on
October 28, with oxygen and an apnea monitor. Growth and development were
reported delayed during the first year of life. The baby was given her MMR
vaccine in October 1993, and according
to the parents she started with head banging and self abusing behavior shortly
thereafter. She also developed severe constipation.
A diagnosis of
autism was confirmed at age 40 months.
Case 7: This Canadian mother received a rubella
vaccine in 1981 when she was only a few days pregnant. She delivered a girl who
appeared to be developmentally delayed starting at the age of two to three
months and was mostly breast-fed for the first six months. The child received
her first MMR on 7/14/1983, shortly after her first birthday and has been
diagnosed with autism.
Discussion
The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the vaccine manufacturer have long
advised against the administration of live virus vaccines to women during and
immediately before delivery.
Seven cases of
women vaccinated during pregnancy are described in this report.
Three mothers
received the rubella vaccine, two the measles vaccine, and one the MMR vaccine.
The seventh mother (case 4) received
the recombinant Hepatitis B vaccine, but had received an MMR vaccine five
months prior to conception.
Problems
with either the pregnancy or the child are reported in every instance. If these problems are indeed related to the
vaccination, then the recommendation not to vaccinate during pregnancy is
justified and should be enforced.
Six out of
the seven children (85%) who resulted from these pregnancies were diagnosed
with autism, and the seventh, (case
1) whose mother received a measles vaccine, exhibits symptoms which suggest
autistic spectrum. This child’s twin brother was stillborn.
One mother (case 2) may have more than one child
with autism.
A mother vaccinated with the rubella vaccine
in the thirteenth week of pregnancy (case
6) gave birth to a very small premature infant who had a stormy neonatal
period.
The problems with two children ( cases 1 and 6) were apparent at
delivery.(3)
It is
impossible to know in case 4 whether
the hepatitis B vaccine given during pregnancy, or the MMR vaccine administered
five months prior to conception, played any role whatsoever in the development
of the child’s autism.
If the MMR vaccine
did, then it could conceivably affect
mothers vaccinated some ten, twenty or more months prior to conception and in
some way contribute to the development of autism in their children.
Selection
bias alone can not explain all the reported findings.
Another
study on vaccination after delivery (11) is reported separately.
The results of the
main research on the effects of maternal vaccination with live virus vaccines
after age 16 will be published in March 2000.
Conclusions
Seven mothers who
were vaccinated during pregnancy have reported problems with the pregnancy or
the resulting children.
These problems may
not have happened if the mothers had not
been vaccinated,
and therefore the
recommendation not to administer live virus vaccines during early pregnancy and
shortly before conception should be enforced more stridently.
Consideration
should be given to re-instate The Vaccine In Pregnancy Registry and to follow
up the children born to mothers vaccinated during pregnancy for an extended period of time, as it is obvious that not all problems with the children
were readily apparent at birth.(3)
Six out of the seven children born to mothers
vaccinated during pregnancy have been diagnosed with autism. If live virus
vaccination during early pregnancy or several months prior to conception is in any way a factor in the
development of autism, then a similar relationship between autism and live
virus vaccination in general should be seriously investigated by independent
longitudinal large scale studies.
Susceptible
adult females do not necessarily develop protective antibodies after receiving
live virus vaccine boosters.
The
administration of Hepatitis B vaccine during pregnancy should be reviewed.
The logic of
ongoing research to develop new vaccines which can be administered to pregnant
women in an effort to “vaccinate two for the price of one” should be very
critically questioned.
Click here for
"Autism: Is There a Vaccine Connection - Part 3"
References:
1. CDC: Epidemiology and Prevention of
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases, 5th Ed. page152: “Women known to be pregnant should not receive measles vaccine. Pregnancy should be avoided for 1 month
following receipt of measles vaccine
and 3 months following MMR vaccine.”
2. CDC: Epidemiology and Prevention of
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases, 5th Ed. page184: “Women known to be
pregnant or attempting to become pregnant should not receive rubella vaccine.
Although there is no evidence that rubella vaccine virus causes fetal damage
(see below), pregnancy should be avoided for 3 months after rubella or MMR
vaccination.”
3. CDC: Epidemiology and Prevention of
Vaccine-PreventableDiseases, 5th Ed. page 186: “From 1971 to 1989 the Centers for Disease Control and prevention ( CDC) maintained a registry of women
vaccinated during pregnancy to determine whether congenital rubella congenital
syndrome would occur in infants of such mothers. Sub-clinical fetal infection has been detected serologically in
approximately 1% to 2% of infants born to susceptible vaccinees regardless of
the vaccine strain. However, based on
data collected by the CDC in the vaccine in pregnancy ( VIP) registry (
1971-1989) no evidence of CRS has occurred in offspring of the 321 susceptible
women who received rubella vaccine and who continued pregnancy to term. The
observed risk of vaccine induced malformations is now 0% …..As of April 30,
1989, CDC discontinued the VIP registry.”
4. CDC: Epidemiology and Prevention of
Vaccine-PreventableDiseases, 5th Ed. page 242: “Pregnant women who are otherwise eligible can be given hepatitis B
vaccine”
5. PDR 1999, page
1737: “Do not give Attenuvax to pregnant
females; the possible effects of the vaccine on fetal development are unknown
at this time. If vaccination of
postpubertal females is undertaken, pregnancy should be avoided for three
months following vaccination.”
6. PDR 1999, page
1833 : “Do not give Meruvax to pregnant
females; possible effects of the
vaccine on fetal development are unknown at this time. If vaccination of postpubertal females is
undertaken, pregnancy should be avoided for three months following
vaccination”.
PDR 1999, page
1834 : “It is also not known whether Meruvax
can cause fetal harm.
In a ten year survey involving over 700 pregnant
women who received rubella vaccine within three months before or after
conception none of the newborns had abnormalities compatible with rubella
congenital syndrome.”
8. PDR 1999, p.
1884 : “The (Hepatitis B) vaccine should
be given to a pregnant woman only if clearly needed.”
9. Changes in the population of persons with
Autism and Pervasive Developmental Disorders in California’s Developmental Services system : 1987 through 1998.
A report to the legislature.
http://www.dds.ca.gov/autismreport.cfm
10. Yazbak, F.E. :Autism 99 A National
Emergency
11.
Yazbak,
F.E. : Autism, Is there a vaccine connection? Part I : Vaccination after delivery.
Dedicated to all the people of
good will who are helping children and adults with autism.
FEY
E-mail address : TLAutStudy@aol.com
The above may not represent the opinions of
organizations to which I belong.
ALL
INFORMATION, DATA, AND MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR
GENERAL INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE
KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED
AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.