http://www.vegan.swinternet.co.uk/articles/health/toxic_overload.html
[Truth Campaign Magazine 8]
|
TOXIC OVERLOAD:
BLOOD DISORDERS AND CANCERS RESULTING FROM EXPOSURE TO DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND
RADIATION by Edward Priestley |
Conditions
| Causes
and Effects | Some Cases
Investigated and Observations
Prevention
and Treatment - Conclusions | References
The following paper is a compilation
of research by and experiences of Edward Priestley and his wife Patricia.
Edward is a victim of a serious and often fatal blood disorder. Patricia is a
state registered nurse.
Edward was
diagnosed as suffering from severe Aplastic Anaemia in April 1986 following
exposure to a number of toxic chemicals at his workplace and, although it was
not recognised by us at the time, he also suffered several of the documented
symptoms of chemical poisoning (memory loss, jaundice, extreme fatigue etc.) in
the weeks and months before diagnosis.
We have
attempted here to try to throw some light on the often confusing circumstances
in which patients of blood disorders and relatives often find themselves.
Remarks from
the medical profession to us from the first days of Edward's admittance to
hospital until his discharge many months later, and afterwards as an
outpatient, were obviously made to try to discourage us from looking for
information on his condition. However this only served to spur us on.
Because
Edward had to spend long periods in hospital, it was impossible for him, and
very difficult for Patricia, to investigate causes of conditions like aplastic
anaemia in any more detail than the sparse information given in many medical
dictionaries. Information on prognosis and possible outcome was very difficult
to find or glean from the medical profession. Curious remarks from the medical
profession made it clear to us that there probably was information that may be
worth knowing which may help with treatment and care. Remarks and
"advice" such as: "You will find it very difficult to discover
anything written on these conditions so do not bother to look, and if you do
find something you may not like what you find". It soon became apparent
that this was the case and that the information was not going to be given to
us. Because Edward was more severely affected and had more serious complications
than many who did not survive, there is little doubt that his survival is due
in part to the information we unearthed for ourselves.
During our
investigations it became increasingly obvious that serious and often fatal
blood disorders resulting from exposure to drugs, chemicals and radiation -
with implications that these conditions are pre-cancerous - could often be
avoided with public awareness. This is the reason for writing. If what we have
written prevents just one case or death then the effort will have been
worthwhile.
In addition,
we have many others to thank for their help for finding and passing on
information which they knew we were seeking. Mr. Dennis Edmundson, with the
vast amount of medical papers he has accumulated plus the knowledge he has of
many medical matters proved a short cut on many occasions in turning up
information which could have taken us days or weeks to find. The names of
relatives of victims and those in the medical profession or connected with the
drug and chemical industries are not revealed for reasons which will become
obvious. Indeed, the concern of some of those in the medical profession, some
of whom wept behind closed doors at the unnecessary suffering, constitute
another good reason for writing.
We accept
responsibility for any errors; we are not journalists or writers.
E.W. & P.A. Priestley.
November 1996.
'Always be prepared to
speak your mind and a base man will avoid you'
William Blake
The medical
papers, textbooks and journals used in our investigations are listed at the
end.
Supporting evidence from medical papers, textbooks and journals
Discussing the
adverse effects on health of prescribed drugs, toxic chemicals and ionising
radiation is always rather an emotive subject. Therefore, to have any credence
it is important and necessary that we only quote from medical and scientific
papers and textbooks written by those who are recognised as experts in their
field.
When Professor
G.C. de Grouchy (an internationally recognised haematologist) wrote his book
"Drug Induced Blood Disorders" in 1974, he stated that his main
reason for writing was to try to improve the lot of the patient. Some blood
disorders are far more common than is supposed. In milder forms they may often
go unnoticed and undiagnosed by the medical profession; but could still be
pre-cancerous. This makes wider public awareness important and would also lead
to the lot of the patient being improved.
Several in the
medical profession whom we spoke to referred to the subject of the causes of
the blood disorders following exposure to drugs, chemicals and radiation as a
"Pandora's Box". As it happened, we had already written exactly that
on our files. Like the story of Pandora, the blood disorders' "Box"
contains many evils and "Hope" lies at the bottom of the box. If all
the evils can be released hope will come in the form of prevention and better
treatment. The only way to improve the lot of the patient is to open the
"Box" which many said we should leave closed, and let out all the
evils.
From remarks
made to ourselves by the medical profession, it is easy to see why so few
individuals that we came across had bothered to look for themselves to see if
what they were being told by the medical profession was correct. To most of the
public the medical profession are on a pedestal and not to be questioned about
either their knowledge or ethics. One consultant we saw on television summed up
the position when he said that "they (the medical specialists) were not
like ordinary mortals but were super intelligent". Whilst much medical
research is very specialist and written in words difficult to understand, anyone
who can read and look up words that they have not come across before, can
understand much through common sense and observation. These are attributes not
always apparent in the specialists.
A number of
statements, information and "advice" we were given by the medical
profession over the two years or so that Edward was a hospital patient, and in
the following periods as an out-patient, were:
The above are
just a few of the many such remarks we had from the medical profession which we
will show were all very inaccurate. Perhaps just one more quote from one
consultant after we produced our evidence, is appropriate - "now you have
pieced it all together correctly like a jigsaw, what are you going to do with
it?"
During 1986 and
part of 1987, despite stays in four hospitals mainly to treat infections
contracted in hospital, it was impossible for us to obtain any prognosis for
Edward's aplastic anaemia. It was suggested for a long time that a bone marrow
transplant was the only form of treatment likely to be of any help. What did
come to light from our investigations was that this was not so; bone marrow
transplants for aplastic anaemia are rarely successful, and it is possible to
make at least a partial recovery without a transplant!
Our first
concern was to try to get Edward's blood counts to a level where it was
possible for him to survive without blood and platelets transfusions. There are
many dangers in transfusion, particularly with repeated ones. Edward contracted
Hepatitis C from a transfusion late in 1986.
Hepatitis C is
now much publicised with its very high risk of a fatal liver disease developing
during the following years. The drugs, chemicals and radiation, being toxic to
the liver, also cause destruction of the bone marrow. The information necessary
to prevent Hepatitis C changing to cancer of the liver, therefore, is the same
as that necessary for survival of aplastic anaemia.
Not only did we
turn up information that most (if not all) cases of Blood Disorders have known
causes, we also uncovered useful information on the best care of the victim if
recovery or partial recovery is to be anything more than chance. Medical papers
showed very clearly, with examples, that sufferers of these conditions can be
very sensitive to future exposures - even years later. So to avoid what the
medical profession calls a "relapse" (but which is really a
re-exposure to a causative agent) it was necessary to avoid contact with all
known causative agents as far as possible. Victims are never given this
information, which is vital for survival, by the medical profession.
The initial few
weeks of conditions like aplastic anaemia carry a very high mortality rate. If
the victim survives this period there is often a period of stabilisation of the
condition. However, it is during the period of stabilisation when the victim is
at extremely high risk of a relapse, due to re-exposure to even a very small amount
of a causative agent which is almost always fatal. Therefore, identification of
the offending agents is vital.
Our medical
dictionary (Mosby's 1994) says that aplastic anaemia is a failure of all the
blood forming elements in the bone marrow; that it may be caused by cancer of
the bone marrow or, more commonly, by destruction of the bone marrow by
exposure to ionising radiation, toxic chemicals, antibiotics or other
medications. It also says that an idiopathic form (of unknown cause) is rare.
We agree with this, after investigation of many others similarly affected.
Apart from one or two cases where information on exposure to causative agents
was not available, we found that there had always been exposure to a known
causative agent in the weeks or months before diagnosis. We also noted that
victims or their families had little or no idea at all that there were well
documented causes. Neither had there been any proper investigation into
possible causes by the medical profession. In the odd case where a causative
agent had been suggested by the victim or relative as a possible cause - even
though the agent suggested was a known causative agent - this had been
dismissed by the medical profession.
Bowman and
Rand's well-known textbook on Pharmacology says that "most cases of
aplastic anaemia are caused by drugs or chemicals" and that "ionising
radiation has the same effect". Again our investigations into many cases
shows that this is correct. This and some other textbooks and medical papers
suggests that there may be two kinds of reaction; one being dose related and
reversible on withdrawal of the causative agent; the other being due to a
genetic or individual susceptibility which can be caused by a small exposure
and which is unpredictable and often irreversible. Whilst there is some truth
that previous exposure to a causative agent can hypersensitise an individual to
future exposures, a survey carried out on American troops in World War Two
(Custer 1946) in the Pacific, showed that this was not the case with thousands
of troops given the anti-malarial drug Quinacrine, which is known to cause bone
marrow depression. The resulting fifty-seven cases of aplastic anaemia showed
that the effect of the drug was dose related and nothing to do with individual
susceptibility or genetic propensity. From our investigations it is certain
that many cases which are attributed to individual susceptibility or genetics
are in fact misdiagnoses because of poor investigation, or non-investigation,
of simultaneous exposure to more than one causative agent. This makes it
appear, without further investigation, that a very small amount of one
causative agent is responsible when in fact a larger exposure to another agent
is the main cause.
Harrison's
internationally known book on Internal Medicine sums up the position very well
when it says that the percentage of cases where a causative agent is found for
aplastic anaemia may vary with the vigour with which a causative agent is
sought. We agree with this, and add that in some cases, obvious large exposure
to a known causative agent was deliberately overlooked.
The importance
of seeking out causes for survival and recovery has already been emphasised and
has been recognised for many years. We have a French medical journal
"Revue de Therapeutics" dated 1938 which, even at that time, stressed
the importance of seeking out the causes of aplastic anaemia such as toxic
chemicals and radiation. Given that prevention is always better than cure,
seeking out causes of those already affected and highly susceptible to further
exposures cannot be in question, but this is unfortunately never done.
Professor G.C.
de Grouchy, in his book on Drug Induced Blood Disorders, notes that the blood
disorders due to adverse drug reaction are very important because of the very
high mortality rate and that, in cases where a drug is the cause, victims
should carry a medical card stating that the offending drug should not be
prescribed in future if at all possible. He also mentions that preferably, as
so many drugs are documented to cause blood disorders, all drugs should be
avoided if possible. He does qualify that this may not be possible as victims
are immuno-compromised and are therefore quite likely to contract a
life-threatening infection. Avoiding contact with people with infections is
therefore very important for victims, as the side-effects of a drug needed to
treat the infection may cause a relapse. Professor de Grouchy, with his vast
experience of many patients over his lifetime, observed that over fifty per
cent of cases of aplastic anaemia were caused by drugs. He also mentions
chemicals and radiation as important causes. Following our investigations we
agree with Professor de Grouchy that around fifty per cent of cases we
investigated were caused by prescribed drugs. The other fifty per cent were
caused by toxic chemicals or radiation. There are probably no idiopathic cases.
As the blood disorders are pre-leukaemic and pre-cancerous, the question is
posed - just what percentage of all cases of leukaemia and cancers are also
caused by the same agents?
E.M. Davies, in
his textbook Adverse Drug Reactions, observes that with drug induced aplastic
anaemia the mortality rate is about seventy per cent within five years. We
found that one hundred per cent of those who knew their condition was caused by
drugs did not survive. Virtually all those who knew the cause of their
condition, or it was suspected by the medical profession that they knew,
regardless of what the cause was, did not survive. Death could probably have
been prevented in the majority of these cases if the victims had been given the
correct medical care and information on how to survive.
There are clear
contradictions in some medical papers. Some experts say they cannot trace
causes in more than fifty per cent of cases whilst other experts cannot
understand why others cannot trace what they see as obvious causes. Here, there
is a strong possibility that it is a case of "those who pay the piper
calls the tune". Most medical research and papers are financed by the
companies producing and profiting from the known causative agents.
Apart from
studies involving large numbers of people which prove beyond any doubt the
cause and effect (like the one described previously of American Pacific troops
in WW2), the only way to show which medical papers and books are correct is to
investigate individual cases for yourself,. This is exactly what we did. Some
of these investigations and the circumstances surrounding them are discussed in
a later section.
Of the many
drugs documented to cause blood disorders, e.g. antibiotics, tranquillisers,
diuretics, anti-inflammatories and many others, perhaps the anti-biotic
Chloramphenicol is the best documented causative agent. This drug was
introduced in the United States in 1949 and by 1952 medical papers were
appearing implicating the drug as a causative agent of aplastic anaemia. It was
about this time that the United States also introduced a register of Blood
Dyscrasias (there is to our knowledge no such register in the United Kingdom).
In keeping with the tradition that it always proves difficult to get doctors to
notify any adverse drug reactions (probably less than 5% in the United
Kingdom), it proved extremely difficult to get doctors to report serious and
fatal blood disorders as adverse reactions to drugs. However, enough cases were
notified for it to be impossible to overlook the fact that Chloramphenicol was
a cause of aplastic anaemia. Proof of this was soon shown when, on knowledge of
the very serious side-effects of the drug, it was used much less often and with
greater care, resulting in a dramatic reduction in the total number of cases of
aplastic anaemia.
The above proof
of a cause and effect shows that what we were told by the medical profession,
namely that there are no drugs or chemicals proved to cause aplastic anaemia,
was untrue. We had already found by this time it was also untrue that there was
very little written on the subject of blood dyscrasias. There have been
countless medical papers written on the subject since 1888 (this being around
the time that many causative agents were being invented and introduced).
In The
American Journal of Pathology 1949, which includes a section on the effects
of radiation on the atomic bomb victims, there is also positive proof of cause
and effect. Page 863 of the Journal shows this clearly when it describes those
dying in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the third to sixth weeks following the
dropping of the bombs and also those surviving the clinical symptoms. It states
that not only were there symptoms of radiation effects, such as epilation (hair
loss), but also the manifestations of aplastic anaemia consequent upon
destruction of the bone marrow. Vitamin deficiencies were also noted in
victims. The textbooks and papers mentioned earlier, which stated that drugs,
chemical and ionising radiation have the same effect, were later shown to be
accurate when laboratory tests showed exactly the same vitamin deficiencies in
victims exposed to toxic chemicals. The American Journal of Pathology on
the Atomic Bomb Victims also notes that the aplastic anaemia observed in the
victims was exactly the same as that caused by drugs.
Bowman and
Rand's Textbook on Pharmacology notes that the incidence of cancer in
the atomic bomb victims was high, and higher the nearer the victims were to the
source of the blast. So we have proof positive with the atomic bomb victims
that the nearer the victim was to the source of the blast the higher the degree
of bone marrow damage and later corresponding higher levels in the incidence of
cancers. This also shows that blood disorders documented to be caused by drugs,
chemicals and radiation have the same causes as leukaemia and other cancers.
Furthermore, this evidence shows that those with blood disorders severe enough
to be diagnosed have a noticeably higher risk of the exposure developing into a
malignant condition. A survey done in the USA on 156 cases of severe aplastic
anaemia showed a 26 fold incidence of thyroid cancer over the rest of the
population. There are similar higher incidences of other cancers in aplastic
anaemia victims.
Benzene is
stated by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as a carcinogen with no known
safe level. All medical textbooks and papers that discuss the effects of this
chemical agree that benzene causes not only cancers but also blood disorders
and leukaemia. It is not surprising therefore that chemicals and drugs
containing benzene, such as the phenothiazines, are documented to cause these
conditions. Medical textbooks as far back as the 1960's state that the presence
of the benzene ring chemical structure implicates a drug as a probable cause of
aplastic anaemia and other blood disorders.
Whilst being
the most common cause of blood disorders due to drug and chemical exposure, benzene
is not the only offending agent either causing or contributing to these
conditions. "Chemistry in Action" by Michael Freemantle (page 600)
states that the halogens chlorine, bromine, fluorine and iodine are toxic.
These alone and in varying degrees can also cause blood disorders. When
combined with benzene in drugs, it is noted in pharmacology books that these
drugs are the ones best documented to cause blood disorders. Fluorine is the
most reactive of these chemicals and it is documented that changing chlorine
for fluorine in a drug can increase the toxicity and potency of a drug many
times. With the phenothiazine antipsychotics, for example, the fluoridated
Trifluperazine is 25 times as toxic as the chlorinated Chlorpromazine. It is
clear here for everyone, but in particular for those who already have a blood
disorder, that when chlorine and fluorine are added to tap water the effect of
a drug might be greater than stated in a drug book.
Acting on this
information, we put Edward on bottled spring water. Perhaps it is a good point
to note here that the restaurants at Westminster provide bottled spring water
for members of Parliament in addition to organic food.
That drugs may
cause leukaemia and other cancers without first causing a blood disorder serious
enough to be diagnosed has been touched upon in some books but it seems there
is a hesitancy to discuss this problem. That a chemical can cause leukaemia and
other cancers without first causing a diagnosed blood disorder is shown very
clearly in the case of the chemical Lindane, an organochlorine pesticide. Blood
disorders like aplastic anaemia, leukaemia and other cancers are very well
documented to be caused by this chemical and compensation has been paid to
victims. Letters we have from the Health and Safety Executive and answers we
have from questions to Government experts in questions in Parliament all
confirm that this is so. This is evidence again that all the drugs, chemicals
and radiation that are documented to cause blood disorders are also capable of
causing leukaemia and other cancers.
Harrison's book
"The Principles of Internal Medicine" notes that the drug
Phenytoin, which is used for epilepsy and which is documented to cause aplastic
anaemia, has also been observed to cause lymphatic conditions. The book
observes that although the disease regressed in most cases when the patient
stopped taking the drug, a significant fraction proceeded to develop Hodgkin's
Disease, i.e. cancer of the lymphatic system. Aplastic anaemia victims have
also been observed to have a much higher than normal risk of developing
Hodgkin's Disease.
Drug books used
daily by doctors when prescribing drugs in the United Kingdom, such as the British
National Formulary (BNF) (written by the British Medical Association and
the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain), now show that certain drugs, for
example Chloramphenicol, cause irreversible aplastic anaemia leading to
leukaemia. It has taken about forty-five years for effects other than blood
dyscrasias to be admitted even though these effects have been known all those
years. It will probably take as long again for the pharmaceutical industry, the
medical profession and governments to admit what is obvious - that all drugs
that are documented to cause blood dyscrasias can also cause leukaemia and
other cancers without always causing a blood disorder serious enough to be
diagnosed before the development of a malignancy.
It will be
obvious by now to the reader just why blood disorders resulting from exposure
to drugs, chemicals and radiation is such a taboo subject. Not only are people
seriously or fatally affected with blood disorders but these blood disorders
point to the causes of vast numbers affected by leukaemia and other cancers.
Because of the relatively short latent period between exposure and the
development of a blood disorder, proof of the cause and effect is comparatively
easy to show and it is this effect that the medical profession, manufacturers
of causative agents and governments try to keep from the public at nearly any
cost. This situation is at the heart of the bribes to the medical profession
from the drug and chemical industry which has had so much publicity over recent
years. From our own investigations we found that these bribes were very common
and they are, of course, sweeteners to the medical profession to prescribe more
drugs than is necessary and not to inform patients of the side-effects.
We now look at
evidence that proves that very large numbers of people are being affected, the
effects often going unnoticed by the individual and overlooked by the medical
profession.
Piscotto wrote
in 1969, after taking blood samples from his patients given the tranquillising
drug Phenothiazine, that of the 6,200 patients he sampled, about 2,000
developed some level of bone marrow damage and leucopenia which in ordinary
circumstances would never have been detected. He also found five cases of
agranulocytosis which had not previously been diagnosed and which were probably
in the early stages before a serious or fatal infection set in. This survey, it
should be noted, studies the effects of just one of hundreds of drugs known to
cause bone marrow depression. What we do not know is the actual figures of all
those affected with all of these other drugs, but it must be a very large
number. We also do not know how many of those who have taken a drug known to
cause bone marrow damage go on to develop a malignancy which may have been
triggered by a drug taken years before. What cannot be denied is that large
numbers are being affected, often unknown to them. It is more than just
coincidence that the increase in the use of drugs, chemicals and radiation
coincides with the increase in incidence of cancers in the period since World
War Two. Figures for the incidence of leukaemia in the USA confirm a steady and
rapid increase in recent decades.
On 11th January
1989, following our investigations into one case of aplastic anaemia, questions
were asked in Parliament (see Hansard) about causes, numbers affected etc., of
aplastic anaemia. It was stated in one answer that over 1,000 cases had been
reported associated with nearly 200 prescribed drugs. What the actual numbers
are was not stated. Over 1,000 could be any number at all and it must also be
borne in mind again that only a very small percentage of adverse drug reactions
are ever reported at all. It was also stated by Mr. Roger Freeman, the
Government spokesman on Health at the time, that all cases were thoroughly
investigated by the medical profession to try to determine the cause. The
stated causes given by the Government experts we found were accurate and we
investigated many cases which showed that the victims had been exposed to the
causative agents listed by the Government. This was all contrary to what we
were told by the medical profession that there were "no known causes"
etc. The numbers of victims given by Government statistics also showed that
what we were told by the medical profession about there being 20 or so cases a
year was untrue. It may be that Mr Roger Freeman was told by the medical
profession that all cases were investigated to determine a possible cause, but
in none of the many cases we looked at had any attempt been made to determine a
possible cause, including Edward's own case.
We have a
letter from the Health and Safety Executive in reply to some enquiries about
the possible cause of Edward's illness which lists a number of chemicals
documented to cause aplastic anaemia. This list is also correct as we were to
find many cases following exposure to these chemicals. Because individual cases
are widely dispersed, investigations as to the possible cause is haphazard to
say the least, with the expected unreliable conclusions being drawn. The
monitoring of the American Pacific troops in World War Two and the atomic bomb
victims shows very accurately a clear cause and effect which is often
overlooked in individual cases. We found great disparity between what the
medical profession told us and what it said in medical papers and textbooks,
which were confirmed by Government experts and agencies. This was further
reinforced by our own investigations.
Some medical
textbooks and papers observe that a viral infection may cause or contribute to
blood disorders along with the drugs, chemicals and ionising radiation. Of the
cases we were able to investigate we found no cases where a virus alone
appeared to be the cause. We found one or two cases where a virus was found
which signalled the end of medical investigations. In these cases there was
invariably some exposure to a known causative agent which was either overlooked
or not investigated. In one case, which was typical, a drug known to cause bone
marrow depression was given to a patient with a viral hepatitis. The drug was
contra-indicated (discouraged for use) in the BNF drug book for anyone with
hepatic impairment so was wrongly prescribed. The rapid and horrific reaction
to the drug, culminating in aplastic anaemia, showed clearly that there was
good reason to suspect that the drug was largely responsible for the fatal
blood disorder. However, this was completely overlooked by the medical
profession.
Another
incident involving ionising radiation that shows clearly cause and effect was
the accident at Chernobyl. Here again, as with the atomic bomb victims, a
number of those near the source of the contamination had their bone marrow
destroyed. Unsuccessful attempts were made to treat them with bone marrow
transplants.
The first
medical paper we can trace on aplastic anaemia was written by Paul Ehrlich in
1888, who was experimenting with chemotherapy which carries a high risk of
destruction of the bone marrow. By 1898 papers had been written on some of the
causes but since that time there has been a general suppression of information
on the known causes.
Information that
all pesticides can be dangerous is shown in a letter we have from the Ministry
of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food dated 17th January 1989, following enquiries
about Edward's exposure to these chemicals. The letter states that "all
pesticides by their very nature are a danger to both human health and the
environment". It also states that MAFF do not test pesticides for safety
before allowing them for use but assess the manufacturers' data on safety. In
the United States it was found that the manufacturers' data had sometimes been
falsified. This admittance of pesticide danger is not what is trotted out in
the press and other media by MAFF and other government agencies.
We were sent a
batch of research from a professor in Germany which includes information about
benzene from, amongst others, The Department of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology, Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It states that Benzene is an ubiquitous
environmental pollutant and chronic exposure causes aplastic anaemia, leukaemia
and other cancers. As benzene is added to unleaded petrol, drugs, pesticides,
herbicides, paints, solvents and may other toxic products, it is perhaps not
surprising that the professor sending us the material was unable to obtain any
further research finance. He sent his best wishes for our endeavours.
Many other
papers, books and other sources could be quoted but we hope that these included
make clear the truth without unnecessary repetition. In the following section,
whilst discussing individual cases which we investigated, we will quote from
some of these other sources and show the connection in some cases with this
literature.
Although
most of the cases we investigated or came across were different, there were
underlying similarities in that the symptoms associated with adverse effects of
drugs and chemicals were often experienced by sufferers in the period of weeks
and months between exposure and diagnosis. It is the relatively short latent
period, mostly two to seven months, between exposure and the symptoms being so
severe as to force the sufferer to seek medical help that makes the causes of
blood dyscrasias comparatively easy to spot. Not all victims experienced all
the symptoms but many suffered one or more of those documented in medical
literature. In some, where relatives were traced after the death of a victim,
no symptoms could be ascertained. Many of those we investigated had not
realised at the time that the symptoms were connected with their underlying
condition and were a possible warning of a more serious condition to follow.
Indeed, obtaining a history at the time that these symptoms are most apparent
can be difficult due to the often neurotoxic affects of the causative agents,
such as confusion and memory loss before and during the early stages of the
illness.
Although by no
means all the victims remembered having a rash, this is a well documented
symptom which often precedes the diagnosis of a serious blood disorder. Edward
and several others we investigated did experience rashes prior to diagnosis.
Other repeating symptoms in those we investigated were nausea, jaundice (due to
toxic liver overload), extreme fatigue, breathlessness (just before diagnosis
due to severe anaemia), impotence and headaches. These are well documented
effects of drug, chemical and radiation exposure.
Edward's
aplastic anaemia followed exposure to a number of toxic chemicals at his work
in the water industry. He experienced some confusion, memory loss, severe
jaundice in the later stages, rashes and inability to concentrate from about
six months before diagnosis.
Diagnosis took
about ten days after hospital admission. Following diagnosis, there was intense
searching by the medical profession for a possible cause. Then, with no
explanation, the searching stopped before any cause was established, and we
were told by a consultant "not to bandy Edward's condition about".
A list of
chemicals Edward came into contact with at work was supplied later by his
employers, the water industry, but it was admitted in a letter accompanying the
list that the list was not complete. This was because "labels had fallen
off the drums of chemicals and these had been destroyed".
Edward does remember
two chemicals not included on the list but we do not have the brand names. One
was an industrial solvent and the other an insecticidal/fungicidal liquid used
in a power washer. Both of these chemicals could well have been implicated as
possible causes. Although a complete list of chemicals Edward worked with could
have been supplied, it was not. His employers denied that withholding this
information was a cover-up.
As a complete
list of chemicals has never been supplied to either us or the medical
profession, it is clear that no proper investigation took place.
This
non-investigation of causes was a regular feature in all the cases we
investigated except a very few where cause and effect was accepted. This is
contrary to assertions in Parliament to the questions asked on 11th January,
1989, when it was stated that all cases were thoroughly investigated.
A copy of a
letter, dated 9th September, from Hammersmith Hospital where Edward was a
patient at that time, to Halifax Hospital where he was first diagnosed, sums up
his medical history from diagnosis and remarks that "although no cause for
Edward's condition was found, he was exposed to a number of chemicals at his
work". Those writing this letter at Hammersmith would have no idea perhaps,
that there had been no proper search for a possible cause at Halifax.
It is of
interest to note that on the incomplete list of chemicals Edward came into
contact with at work were herbicides like Agent Orange (as used in the Vietnam
war - for which the thousands of America troops exposed have been paid
compensation). There are also toxic chemicals on the list supplied by Chipman
Chemicals of which Mr. Dennis Thatcher is a director. There is, perhaps, a
conflict of interests here with a Prime Minister's husband supplying products
to a government-owned industry and this may be another reason why
investigations into the possible causes of Edward's condition were mysteriously
dropped and us being told "not to bandy his condition about".
During 1986/87
Edward spent long periods in four hospitals, two in Halifax, Leeds General and
Hammersmith London, with severe aplastic anaemia, complicated by some
life-threatening infections contracted whilst in these hospitals. He had very
bad Aspergillus Pneumonia with a collapsed left lung which he contracted from
another patient at Leeds General. This took several months to treat at
Hammersmith Hospital. He also contracted several other serious infections,
including septicaemia, which were life threatening, in addition to which he had
many episodes of haemorrhage, some spontaneous and internal, which could have
proved fatal. In late 1986 he contracted Hepatitis C through a blood
transfusion. This virus carries the high risk of developing into a fatal liver
disease in subsequent years. Many of these complications and infections were
due to poor hospital care and may well have contributed to making the aplastic
anaemia more severe for a longer period, as drugs for these infections were
documented to cause aplastic anaemia.
Edward was given
a course of an "experimental" drug, Antilymphocyte Immunoglobulin, to
treat the aplastic anaemia (the drug has now been withdrawn with no
explanation). This drug, derived from horse serum was used to try to stop
transplant rejection by lowering the immune system to near zero. At the end of
this course of the drug, whilst Edward's immune system was still very low, a
leukaemia patient with Aspergillus Pneumonia was sent by the hospital staff to
play chess with him. It was inevitable that Edward would contract the
infection.
The drug he was
treated with for aspergillus was Amphotericin which was probably the best drug
for the infection but is documented to cause aplastic anaemia. There is little
doubt that his many months at Hammersmith following this episode with no
alternative but to treat him with high levels of Amphotericin contributed
greatly towards delaying any recovery of his bone marrow. This is one probable
reason why Edward's blood count took about ten years to return to near normal
levels.
Medical neglect
also contributed greatly towards Edward developing Septicaemia (blood
poisoning). Halifax and Hammersmith hospitals disagreed about who should take
out Edward's second Hickman line (a plastic tube inserted into a vein near to
the heart which exits from the chest and is used to insert drugs, transfusions,
take blood samples etc.), which had been in for about six months. This line was
no longer in regular use and was a constant potential source of infection.
Patricia, being an SRN, had warned over several weeks of the danger of
septicaemia if the line was not removed. So it was particularly annoying when
this happened, necessitating a further two weeks in hospital. As Edward had
already had many weeks in hospital with drips inserted while he had no Hickman
line, most of his veins had collapsed resulting in two painful weeks with many
attempts made to insert cannulas that sometimes only lasted a few hours.
Again, drugs
for septicaemia are very toxic. Therefore, infections like this should be
avoided if at all possible in those particularly at risk.
When he was
first admitted to hospital and after diagnosis Edward was visited by a senior
member of the hospital staff who said he should enjoy his relative comfort at
that time as he was in for "a very rough ride". We discovered that
poor hospital care and inappropriate treatment for the victims of aplastic
anaemia was not unusual and was obviously known by this member of staff.
Through this
period (1986-87) Edward was often very ill and in isolation for long periods,
so it was difficult for us to make any investigative headway with other victims
save for a few other cases of aplastic anaemia.
At Leeds
General (May-June 1986) we observed two other sufferers of aplastic anaemia:
Case no. 2 (Edward being no.1) was
a very mild case in a young man who had taken an anti-malarial drug during an
African trip. This case was without complications and resolved in a week or
two. These drugs (as already mentioned in the large scale survey of American
Pacific troops in World War Two) are very well known to cause aplastic anaemia.
Case no. 3 was a timber worker
with a severe case of aplastic anaemia. We did not realise it at the time but
the chemicals used in timber treatment are also well documented to be causative
agents. These chemicals were to crop up many times later causing not only blood
dyscrasias but also leukaemia and other cancers.
Following
Edward's transfer to Hammersmith in May 1986 he was in isolation for several
months with the severe aplastic anaemia and aspergillus pneumonia:
Case no. 4 was in the next
isolation room to Edward. We did not actually see this man but we could not
help gathering information through overhearing staff conversations about some
of the surrounding circumstances. It appears that he was a trainee doctor who
had been taking a drug in some trials for a pharmaceutical company when he
developed the aplastic anaemia and died. This was confirmed later when his case
was mentioned in a book called "The Health Conspiracy - How Doctors, the
Drug Industry and the Government Undermine Our Health" by Dr. Joe Collier,
a lecturer in pharmacology.
During Edward's
transfer to an open ward at Hammersmith, a few other victims of aplastic
anaemia were observed, two of whom we were able to investigate as we were able
to speak to them at some length:
Case no. 5 was a middle aged woman
who had been prescribed the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug Brufen; again
documented to cause blood disorders. This woman died despite several bone
marrow transplants from an identical twin sister. This told us that there was
more to a successful transplant than just having a good genetic match.
Transplant rejection is often due to sensitisation and rejection caused by
pre-transplant blood transfusions; though this is not a problem in leukaemia
patients.
Case no. 6 was a man of about 30
years who became ill following a period when he had worked sticking down floor
tiles with a solvent adhesive. We had contact with this man both in and out of
hospital for some time but have lost touch now after he moved house, so we do
not know the outcome of the illness. The cause of his aplastic anaemia was
initially identified by the medical investigation to be the benzene-related
substance, Toluene, in the adhesive. This substance is documented to cause
aplastic anaemia. Then, without explanation, the victim was told that he was to
forget that the solvent was the cause. This echoed Edward's experience when
first diagnosed and the search for a cause was abandoned with no explanation,
being told later not to bandy his condition about. This victim made it known to
us that he was well aware that all was not as it should be and that
inappropriate treatment is given in such cases.
Whilst Edward was
a patient at Leeds General Hospital a fund was set up by friends and relatives
to help patients locally. Patricia named the fund the Bone Marrow Disease Fund.
We eventually raised several thousand pounds which paid for many items -
televisions, bedchairs and other items to help make life a little more bearable
for the victims and relatives staying overnight with very sick patients.
Having no other
way of contacting sufferers, except perhaps in hospitals, there had seemed
little or no prospect of finding out if there really were only about 20 or so
cases a year in total in the United Kingdom as we had been told. Fortunately,
because of the publicity raised in the press, the Fund was instrumental in
connecting us with a number of victims and relatives who were able to talk to
us at length about the possible causes of their conditions. We needed this
information in order to get some idea of Edward's chance of survival. Had there
been any who were as severely affected as Edward who had survived or recovered?
It very soon became apparent that there were far more sufferers than the twenty
or so a year!
The Fund had
not been going very long before we encountered some opposition and pressure
from certain figures in the medical profession and from a national leukaemia
charity. They wished us to stop our help and support of victims and relatives.
Pressure was put on hospital staff to refuse help from us for the victims and
relatives but we still managed to help to buy some medical equipment as well as
comforts for victims and relatives. This opposition eventually ceased a few
years later when we stopped fund raising .
One reason
given for the opposition was that we were diverting funds from research into
possible cures and should not be concerning ourselves with support for victims
and their families, nor with prevention of the conditions, despite knowing the
causes in most cases.
Medical
charities are controlled by the medical profession and therefore by the drug
and chemical industries. It is they that actually cause the vast majority of
blood disorders, leukaemia and other cancers. It is perhaps not surprising then
that we experienced such opposition from those profiting initially by causing
the conditions and then again by selling the treatment. Prevention and the best
care and treatment cannot be achieved without informing the public and victims
of the causes. This is the very information the drug/ chemical and nuclear
industries, medical profession and governments want to keep from the public.
Case no. 7 was the first person to
contact us through the Fund publicity. This was a middle-aged woman who died
about a year after we met her. According to the medical profession there was no
question as to the cause of the anaemia - prolonged chemo/radiotherapy for breast
cancer. Cancer treatment chemicals and radiation are amongst the most common
and well known causes of blood disorders.
Case no. 8 was a young woman who
had moderate to severe aplastic anaemia. On investigation, she had been
diagnosed with a virus infection but also had used considerable amounts of wood
treatment chemicals in a house she and her fiancé had bought. She experienced
some of the symptoms documented to be caused by the chemicals in the period
preceding diagnosis. There was no investigation by the medical profession as to
the possible cause and the case was probably put down to being idiopathic (of
unknown origin). To our knowledge, following a critical period after diagnosis,
this young woman is alive and well and she and her family have some information
from us on care and prevention. Also in this case we noted, as with Edward, the
victim went on to develop long term severe bone and joint problems resulting in
a knee joint repair.
It was admitted
by the medical profession to us that Edward's severe joint problems was caused
by long term effects of the drugs he was given in hospital. The problems
started about eighteen months after diagnosis of the aplastic anaemia. We were
refused information as to which drugs had caused the problem but now feel sure
that Hydrocortisone was responsible which was given daily in large doses for
long periods before platelet transfusions in 1986-87. This was given in order
to dampen down anaphylactic (severe shock) reactions. This drug is documented
to cause osteoporosis as a side-effect.
Case no. 9 was a middle-aged woman
whose case was similar to case no. 5. She was also treated with Brufen. She
also died. The medical profession recognised this as the cause of the aplastic
anaemia but death was put down to an accidental overdose of tablets. This was
not accurate, however, as the woman had phoned us before she died and was
obviously in a suicidal mood due not only to her long term painful illness but
also largely due to very poor treatment by some medical staff. It should be
emphasised here that none of the victims survived in cases where the medical
staff were aware or suspected that the victim was aware of the cause of their
condition! This remained true with all subsequent cases that we investigated.
Treatment for these conditions, especially if the victim knows or suspects the
cause is poor, to say the least; to the point where they may be driven to
suicide. This was the first case we had come across where a victim took their
own life but many were driven to the brink.
Case no. 10 was a middle-aged woman
diagnosed with myelodysplastic anaemia. In this case the dangers of subsequent
exposures even years after the initial exposure was highlighted. These cases
are without doubt many of those said by the medical profession to be caused by
genetic or individual susceptibility. Whilst the description may not be a
complete untruth, the fact is the victim has been hypersensitised by one
exposure to future ones. In this particular case the woman had a moderate and seemingly
irreversible anaemia following exposure to a large amount of industrial solvent
used to clean paint spilt on a carpet. Although the treatment for anaemia was
of no help, the problem was not incapacitating to a large degree and did not
require transfusions. As usual there had been no investigations, or history
taken, by the medical profession to try to ascertain the cause. Therefore
correct treatment for the anaemia was not thoroughly investigated.
About ten years
later, whilst still suffering from the anaemia, the woman used large amounts of
wood preservatives on fences and a garden shed and sprayed some fruit trees
with an insecticide. These exposures were followed by a dramatic collapse of
the bone marrow leading to the diagnosis of myelodysplastic anaemia. Again,
these exposures were not noticed or investigated by the medical profession.
When the woman later showed her consultant how we had worked out the causes of
her condition, he admitted that our conclusions were correct and he had not
noticed before that these chemicals caused the blood disorders. He also
commented that he had recently treated two young men who had died of leukaemia
after working with wood preservative chemicals. Following the collapse of the
bone marrow the woman needed blood transfusions for the rest of her life.
Further exposures to causative agents during a trip to Africa, which we had
warned against, led to even worse depression of the bone marrow with both white
cells and platelets now affected. The condition ended with a fatal infection.
Case no. 11 was a middle-aged woman
who suffered moderate anaemia and very bad allergies. Allergies are documented
to follow blood dyscrasias and bone marrow and immune system damage. When we
met her, this woman had been ill for about 30 years. Her health problems and
anaemia had followed a period at her work when she was exposed to benzene
several times a week. Numerous doctors and specialists had tried to investigate
her health problems over the years, none of whom had been of any help. She was
finally sent to an allergy specialist who suggested that the only way she could
live without the allergic effects was to live in a plastic bubble away from all
pollutants. Through all the years of investigations and unsuccessful
treatments, which had included operations which found nothing, not one doctor
had thought to obtain a history of the onset of the illness which followed the
benzene exposure. It took us about ten minutes to elicit a history.
This woman's
allergies were so severe that merely drinking or washing in tap water caused
her to break out in a rash. This was due to the added chemicals and stray
pollutants in the water supply. She drank distilled water from glass bottles as
even the minute traces from bottled water in plastic bottles affected her. She
also found some local spring water in which she could wash without having a
reaction.
We suspected
that the large chemical works nearby may be contributing to her condition. She
informed us that she had not been away from the area since she became ill. She
then booked a holiday in Portugal for two weeks. On return she reported that
during the second week she began to feel better than she had done for many
years. The last time we saw this woman she was still suffering multiple
allergies but had improved because of the knowledge of the cause of her
condition.
This was not
the only case we found which included allergies following exposure to drugs and
chemicals which are documented to cause bone marrow and immune system damage,
including one case in which a young man using benzene died of cancer who had
done the same job as case no. 11. Edward's own experience of allergies, which
started to develop about 15 months after he was diagnosed, is also similar to
case no.11 in that an item of food, drink or environmental pollutant exposure,
such as paints, trigger off a reaction which can take about ten days to
subside. This can make identification of triggers difficult as the effects of
exposure to one offending agent can overlap the effects of another leading to
constant reactions like headaches, sickness etc..
Although
normally a rather taboo subject in the media, we did notice from time to time
some reports of aplastic anaemia in the press. One article in The Observer
reported on the giving of a drug to third world children but which was banned
in the West and is documented to cause aplastic anaemia. This and several other
news items suggested that victims of aplastic anaemia may be being used as
human guinea pigs in medical and military experiments.
This was
confirmed when the words "guinea pig" were observed written in the
hospital medical notes of one case of aplastic anaemia we investigated. When
questioned by relatives as to why this was written in the notes, the answer,
after some hesitation from the medical staff, was that they wanted to know if
the victim had ever kept guinea pigs. NO medical papers of the hundreds written
on the subject have ever mentioned that there is any evidence that contact with
guinea pigs has any connection with blood disorders! It does however show the
disregard some in the medical profession have for the victims of these
conditions.
Because the
blood dyscrasias are deliberately caused by chemical and nuclear weapons and
because the conditions are pre-cancerous there is naturally much interest in
these victims for medical and military research. Much has been exposed now of
the deliberate contamination of the public with nuclear products to observe the
effects on large numbers of people. This includes feeding radioactive products
to hospital patients in meals and injecting nuclear products into the placentas
of pregnant women to observe the effects on the baby after birth.
Anyone looking
at the research papers written on aplastic anaemia cannot fail to observe that the
researchers often note a difference in the effects of many drugs on different
ethnic groups. Some medical and military research has been carried out on large
numbers of people into the possibility of producing viable ethnic chemical or
nuclear weapons. During the 1980s it was exposed that large numbers of babies'
heads from India were shipped to hospitals in twenty-three Western nations for
experiments into the possibility of producing weapons which would be selective
of race. Research Edward was involved in at Hammersmith into genetics and
transplant rejection could also have been used to help make ethnic chemical
weapons and this hospital was one of those publicised as using pregnant women
in experiments. There is also a considerable amount of evidence to show that
where insufficient numbers of victims with conditions like aplastic anaemia are
available for use in medical and military experiments, the conditions are being
induced deliberately to create the human guinea pigs. Whilst Edward was an
out-patient, staff exclaimed their horror to us about what was happening there
and how powerless they were to do anything.
In addition to
cases we were finding with a diagnosed condition, we found far greater numbers
who had no diagnosed condition but who had been exposed to a lesser amount of a
causative agent and who were suffering long term debilitating illnesses. Such
effects as allergies, extreme fatigue, headaches, sickness, diarrhoea, rashes,
anorexia and many other similar conditions are documented as symptoms of
chronic exposure to the causative agents of the blood disorders. Because there
was rarely, if ever, any investigation by the medical profession into the
causes of these conditions, many were told that their problems were "all
in the mind". In many cases drugs for psychosis were prescribed. This
invariably made their conditions worse as tranquillising drugs contain the same
or similar chemicals to those causing their illness in the first place and are
documented to cause serious and fatal blood disorders which are pre-cancerous.
We have never met one person who was told in advance by a doctor that such
drugs can have serious or fatal side-effects. Moreover, if such an effect does
occur, the victim is never made aware of the cause.
A leukaemia
researcher from the same "charity" which had tried to stop our Fund
visited us. She said she was looking at cases of aplastic anaemia and that she
may be able to help us. However, her questions had nothing to do with aplastic
anaemia or other blood disorders and we got the impression that she was only
fishing to see what we knew. We showed her a number of our questionnaires which
came back from victims and relatives. With no prompting from us, all showed
exposures to known causative agents. She looked alarmed at this and admitted
that she had interviewed several of the same victims as us. She too had noticed
the exposure to known causative agents.
One disturbing
fact that came to light was that multinational drug and chemical companies had
names and addresses of victims of both blood dyscrasias and leukaemia. This
could explain the anonymous threats which some victims and relatives received.
The most likely source of the leak of this information, we think, is through
medical charities and research organisations which seem to have access to
information on victims from hospitals. We were on the receiving end of some
anonymous threats ourselves.
Case no. 12 contacted us from
London after his sister had sent him a copy of an article Edward had written
about aplastic anaemia and its causes which had been printed in the local
press. It transpired that he had been diagnosed as having aplastic anaemia in
the 1940s after exposure to mercury at his work. Mercury is a known causative
agent. His was a very mild case which resolved after a few blood transfusions
and he had no complications. Even so, he was the first we had found who had
survived a long time. It was unusual that this case knew the cause of his
condition but we understand that he had not spoken to anyone about his
condition before.
Case no. 13 was a teacher who had
been diagnosed as having severe aplastic anaemia a few months before he
contacted us. He taught crafts and his passion was for model making.
Consequently, he used solvent adhesives daily in most lessons as well as at
home in the evenings and at weekends. There was, therefore, large regular
uncontrolled exposure to known causative agents. This man was very ill during
the two years or so we were in touch but we have now lost contact with him so
we do not know the outcome.
There are
similar cases noted in medical papers. Professor Edward Gordon-Smith notes in
one paper that solvent abusers are at a higher risk than normal of developing a
blood disorder. Furthermore, one of the answers we had to the questions asked
in Parliament on 11th January 1989 stated that solvent abusers have been
observed to develop aplastic anaemia.
Case no. 14 is one of many not
fully investigated by us but found after the event. It is just one of many such
cases, several of which were reported in the press. This was a fatal blood
disorder following the injection of gold salts for arthritis. Despite being one
of the best documented causes of blood disorders, no warning was given of the
possible side-effects. One press report documented how the family of a woman
being given gold injections had begged the doctors to stop because of the
terrible effects it was having. Sadly, more injections were given and the woman
died of aplastic anaemia.
Case no. 15 came to us following a
newspaper article by Edward in the local press which mentioned arthritic drugs
as a cause of aplastic anaemia and other blood disorders. This woman had been
prescribed Brufen. Her experience was like that of many. She became moderately
anaemic and was rushed into hospital. Her arthritic drug was withdrawn with
little explanation. She was then given a few blood transfusions and was
discharged about three weeks later.
For every case
of a definite fatal blood disorder being diagnosed we found substantially large
numbers like this one with either what appears to be a full or partial
recovery. In most cases there seems to be a poorer level of health after an
apparent recovery of the bone marrow. With regards to the total numbers of
those less severely affected, it appears that aplastic anaemia and other blood
disorders are only the tip of a very big iceberg.
Case no. 16 was a teenager who died
of aplastic anaemia having had contact at work with chemicals, including
Analine. (In another case we found - not reported here - compensation was paid
when Aniline was implicated in a case of aplastic anaemia after we supplied the
victim with the documented effects of the chemical.) The history given to us by
his relatives was that he had not had a large exposure to the chemical but was
just recovering from hepatitis when he was prescribed the drug Ponstan
(mefenamic acid) for headaches. The drug was contra-indicated and documented to
cause blood disorders in the BNF drug book, so was wrongly prescribed. His reactions
were rapid and severe. The drug was therefore withdrawn by his doctor and the
rest were retrieved from his parents after admission to hospital.
At one point,
it was denied by the medical profession that the drug had ever been prescribed.
However, subsequent production of a copy of the prescription proved that it
had. In this case, as far as we are aware, the family is still, years later,
waiting for an official explanation and report from the hospital. Like most
others we contacted or who contacted us, the family had little idea that there
are well documented causes of these conditions and again there has been no
investigation by the medical profession into the cause.
Although it
could be claimed that there was more than one possible cause of the aplastic
anaemia in this case - i.e. a chemical, an infection and a drug - there are
several things that point to the drug as being the principal cause. Firstly,
the drug is documented in Martindale's Extra Pharmcopoeia (an internationally
recognised book) to cause bone marrow depression. Secondly, the drug was
contra-indicated in the BNF, which also lists blood disorders as a side effect
of the drug. Thirdly, there was the expected severe reaction to the drug (the
reason why it was contra-indicated), followed by symptoms leading up to
hospital admission and diagnosis of aplastic anaemia. Circumstances surrounding
the case also suggest that the medical profession were aware of the cause and
that an error in prescribing had been made which was then covered up.
This case had
the shortest latent period between exposure and diagnosis that we had found,
but there are similar and even shorter ones documented in medical papers, such
as the atomic bomb victims whose diagnosis took only two to three weeks. Once
again, contrary to assertions given by the Government to the questions asked in
Parliament on 11th January 1989, there was no investigation of the causes in
this case. It is possible that the small chemical exposure and the infection
potentiated the effects of the drug.
Case no 17 was a female relative
who had a serious bone marrow condition which we found to have followed the
prescription of a drug known to cause the condition. She was diagnosed as
having myelofibrosis. On receiving information from us she made a partial
recovery but was never 100% again and died about three years later. She had
several transfusions but her bone marrow did not recover to a great degree. The
disorder developed after she was prescribed the drug Benzyl Penicillin for a
suspected virus infection. Medical textbooks make it quite clear that there is
an increased risk of a side effect developing if someone suffering from a virus
infection is exposed to a causative agent of bone marrow depression - what is
called a synergistic effect. Antibiotics are not effective against viral
infections so should probably only be given to those suffering from a virus if
they develop a secondary infection which will respond to an antibiotic.
The relative
had the same local haematology specialist as Edward who, on realising they had
the same name and were related, immediately stated that the conditions were
similar which showed that the causes of these disorders were genetic and must
run in the family. However, no other member of the family has, to date, suffered
from a blood dyscrasia. This went on for several months, the consultant
becoming more and more dogmatic that the causes were genetic. It would have
been amusing to see his face when eventually the relative, who could only keep
from laughing with difficulty, pointed out that the cause could not be genetic
as she was only related by marriage. What this does show is that the conditions
are indeed of the same causes as those documented in medical papers - drugs,
chemicals and radiation. It also shows the zeal with which the medical
profession try to place the cause of some conditions as anything but the true
cause.
It was this
same consultant who, after telling Edward that there were no known causes of
blood dyscrasias, walked off angrily when Edward took his BNF drug book out of
his pocket and opened it at pages which documented several drugs to have
aplastic anaemia as a side effect!
Contrary to the
usual non-coverage of these conditions in the media, there followed a period of
some publicity of conditions resulting from exposure to timber treatment
chemicals - Lindane being the most common offending chemical. Anglia Television
covered a story in some detail, whilst the Observer newspaper ran an article on
the cover-up of the adverse effects of such chemicals by manufacturers and the
Government. Names of some victims suffering from aplastic anaemia, leukaemia
and other related information was given by us to both press and television.
Investigative journalists expressed their astonishment that anyone could doubt
that there was any question over a cause and effect, considering there were so
many victims and so much medical and scientific evidence. The London Hazards
Centre was involved and they had several hundred victims contacting them. The
publicity and obvious cover-up was enough to get several hundred MPs to sign a
petition calling for a ban on some of the offending chemicals. And finally,
after many years, countless needless deaths and untold suffering, the United
Kingdom followed many other nations in banning the chemicals for some purposes
including treatment of house timbers.
In most cases
following exposure to the timber treatment chemicals it is not possible to
convince a court of law of a cause and effect. For instance, how can you prove
that a teenager who dies of aplastic anaemia following the treatment of a house
has not been abusing solvents, an activity which is documented to cause the
same condition? However, proof positive is possible if a gas chromatography
test is performed which will show what chemicals have been absorbed and at what
levels. This shows, as surely as it did with the atomic bomb victims and other
surveys done on large numbers of victims, that there is no doubt as to the
cause and effect.
Out of court
compensation has been paid to victims of aplastic anaemia and cancers due to
the treatment of house timbers where it was difficult for the defence to
confuse the possible causes. At least one haematology department at a Liverpool
hospital, in an article in the Haematology Journal 1990, described how gas
chromatography tests revealed a number of patients who had been exposed to
Lindane. Investigations by us show that many haematology departments in the
United Kingdom had numbers of sick and dying patients suffering blood disorders
and leukaemia following their exposure to timber treatment chemicals. In
several cases there was more than one person in a treated house affected. In
one house there were both aplastic anaemia and cancer victims. In another, two
died of leukaemia.
The history of
lindane (a benzene-related organochlorine pesticide) is interesting. It was
first made by Michael Faraday in 1834 but was not used as an insecticide until
after the Second World War. The first scientific paper we have on the chemical
is in an American Journal of the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry dated 6th
October, 1951 in which it as observed that, in addition to many other symptoms,
it could cause blood disorders. Michael Faraday at one time in his career
suffered some of the documented symptoms of benzene and/or lindane exposure
with severe memory loss and confusion severe enough to stop him lecturing for a
time.
It should be
noted that when doing the gas chromatography tests to detect levels of
chemicals like lindane, low levels were also found in those used as control
samples. Today, like DDT, lindane is found in all mammals throughout the world.
As lindane is stored in body fat and not easily excreted it is almost certainly
one of the causes of the increase in cancers since the last war. This has
coincided with an increased use of other agents known to cause cancers.
Although
Michael Faraday went on to other work and made an apparent recovery from his
benzene and lindane exposures, Marie Curie was not so fortunate. She died of
aplastic anaemia resulting from her exposure to the radium she was working with
over the years. It is often said she died of leukaemia but this is not true. It
is reported that her notebooks and papers are still dangerous because of
radioactive contamination. Following her discoveries, radium was used by the
medical profession, with no evidence at all that it was effective or safe, for
just about every known ill, from depression to constipation. It was not until
the number of doctors falling victim to its effects were too numerous to be
overlooked that they admitted it was dangerous. Thousands of those treated died
of aplastic anaemia and leukaemia.
Such disregard
for the obviously serious or fatal effects of medical treatments has repeated
itself time and time again in the present century with millions killed and
injured by the medical profession's refusal to accept what their own research
says about the dangers of some medical treatments. Whenever a new
"miracle" cure is promoted by the drug industry it is often promoted
as not having the terrible side-effects of the last miracle cure and it is not
until the next miracle cure comes along that the side-effects of today's
treatment will be admitted. Current drug books used by the medical profession,
like the BNF, do now warn against over-prescribing, encourage doctors to be
sure that a drug is needed at all, and stress the need to report all
side-effects including conditions like cancer which can manifest years later.
Case no. 18 involved the fatal case
of a pre-school aged infant boy with aplastic anaemia. It appeared that a
number of people were affected adversely in a fairly small area of a northern
industrial town. It was not possible for us to investigate the case properly
but it is included here as we found several such areas with more than one
person affected in one location. It has not been possible to establish a
definite causative agent but one possible cause was that the area was adjacent
to the site of an old armament factory. The chemicals used for explosives are
documented to cause aplastic anaemia, and we have medical papers showing this.
Whatever the cause, several people including a doctor had tried to investigate
but had their attempts stopped. In one incident, a plan of the area mapping
with pins the location of victims mysteriously disappeared from a local
hospital without any explanation. Anonymous threats to families were reported
to us as well as a few other incidents which made it clear that someone knew
something about the causes of illnesses in the area.
This case is
similar to one at Love Canal in the United States where houses were built on an
old toxic waste site. Here a number of residents, mostly children, suffered
conditions like leukaemia etc. After some years it was finally admitted that
toxic chemicals, including lindane, were responsible for the illnesses and the
area was evacuated.
In case no. 18,
however, it seems unlikely that anyone is ever going to admit that the area is
contaminated.
Case no. 19 was a young male
nuclear worker and would not speak to anyone about his condition. The nuclear
industry in the United Kingdom now has a "no-faults" compensation
scheme to cover such cases and it is possible that in this case the victim had
accepted compensation and signed to say he would not discuss his condition with
anyone. This case was related to us via his friends and relatives.
Case No. 20 was a young man was a
fatal victim of agranulocytosis, and the first where the condition was not
associated with platelet and red cell destruction. We spoke to his brother who
informed us that the victim had worked with benzene-related chemicals at a
local chemical works. We also spoke to a friend of the victim who had worked at
the same works and he explained that there was no real protection for the workers,
so they had devised their own safety system. If they developed what they called
"the shakes, sweats or bright coloured urine" they got out of the job
quickly before they developed more serious or fatal effects. Whilst this offers
a degree of self-protection, it is likely that once symptoms had been noticed
there would already be a higher than normal risk of developing cancers etc. in
the longer term.
Case no. 21 was the youngest
daughter of a workman we employed. The child was below school age when she
developed thrombocytopenia. This was first diagnosed as a case of child abuse
due to the extensive bruising caused by her lack of platelets. It took about
two weeks for the correct diagnosis to be made, whereupon the child was given
platelet transfusions over a period of several months. Her white cells had also
diminished producing a risk of infection causing her to be placed in isolation
for a few weeks. Investigations showed that the house had been treated with
timber preservatives in the months before the child became ill. Early symptoms
had been noticed by the parents before diagnosis, which suggested that the
chemicals were responsible. We could find exposure to no other causative agent
during the year or so before diagnosis. The reasons why the other children were
not affected was probably because they were bigger, therefore less susceptible,
and were at school or out of the house much of the time in the months following
treatment of the timbers.
When the family
tried to obtain private extra medical insurance the insurance company would not
entertain insuring a child who had thrombocytopenia. Edward has also been
unable to obtain any life insurance since his aplastic anaemia. This shows that
insurance actuaries are fully aware of the long term effects of blood
dyscrasias. In Edward's case the hepatitis C also seems to be considered in the
same light.
We found
several more victims of aplastic anaemia and related disorders subsequent to
chemical exposure via the Pesticide Group of Sufferers (PEGS), several of whom
had been exposed to lindane. This organisation was started by Mrs Enfys
Chapman, her family and friends after her exposure to organophosphorous
insecticides after being accidentally exposed during crop spraying. None of
these cases differed much from the ones we had already investigated. We
suggested gas chromatography tests to one case which established proof of cause
and effect after exposure to above normal levels of lindane. We were able to
help some who were not too seriously affected to recover by giving them the
information they needed, such as in one recent case of megaloblastic anaemia
following exposure to chemicals including lindane. All the cases connected with
PEGS, and we still have contact with some, confirmed what we had already
investigated in relation to causes of the conditions.
Investigations
into the organophosphorous compounds, which are used in drugs, nerve war
chemicals and insecticides, showed that there are also documented causes of
paralysing illness with damage to motor neurones - described as delayed
neuropathy. Around this time we also looked at Parkinson's disease which is
well documented to be caused by prescribed drugs and herbicides - phenothiazine
tranquillisers being the most common cause.
The cases described
in this section are by no means all of those that we investigated but they give
a good overall picture of what we found when interviewing other sufferers,
whilst avoiding repetition. Several cases where compensation was paid after we
supplied victims or relatives with information and data are not included.
Recent media
coverage of many farmers becoming paralysed after using the chemicals as
insecticides for sheep dipping has shown our investigations into the effects of
the organophosphorous chemicals to be correct. Some of those we spoke to had
been paid out of court compensation, including Mrs. Enfys Chapman. Furthermore,
the troops in the Gulf War who were exposed to the same chemicals, show many of
the symptoms documented to be caused by the organophosphorous chemicals. The
paralysing conditions caused by these drugs, chemicals and insecticides ( as
well as nerve war weapons) with damage to motor neurons , is once again the
main reason for the cover-up. The drug and chemical industry, politicians and
the medical profession, do not want to admit that these are responsible for
many of today's paralysing conditions. It is quite probable that the troops in
the Gulf War were used as "human guinea pigs" as there is a long
history of governments using troops in medical and military experiments. In the
Gulf War cases, it is possible that medications have combined with the effects
of the chemicals to complicate the symptoms.
We
found that the only sure way for effective prevention of blood disorders and
cancers resulting from exposure to drugs, chemicals and radiation is avoidance
of causative agents. This can only be achieved through greater public
awareness. This is not always easy, however. In Edward's case, his employers
and the suppliers had said that herbicides he used at work were "safe
enough to eat off a spoon, as safe as table salt". On investigation later
it turned out that these chemicals were on official poison registers and some
could not be bought by the general public. There have now been laws passed
making it illegal to make false claims for the safety of toxic chemicals,
herbicides etc.
It is difficult
to get at any accurate official figures for the total numbers affected. A few
years ago it was admitted that the official figures for the number of cases of
leukaemia in the United Kingdom were 60% less than the actual numbers which
shows to what degree official figures can be inaccurate. Because blood
dyscrasias have the same causes as leukaemia and other cancers and as no tests
are normally done, it is difficult to know just how many who develop leukaemia
and other cancers first, have some degree of bone marrow damage which goes
undetected. The tests done by Piscatto in 1967 to monitor the effects of the drug
Phenothiazine on over 6,000 of his patients showed an alarming one third having
some degree of bone marrow damage. Therefore, it is probable that just about
everyone in the western countries since World War Two has taken one or more of
the hundreds of drugs known to cause bone marrow depression and therefore will
have some genetic damage and a predisposition to leukaemia and other cancers.
With the
massive increase in the prescribing of drugs, use of chemicals and exposure to
non-natural occurring radiation since World War Two it is hardly surprising
that as many as one third of the populations of some western nations like the
United Kingdom can expect to develop cancer at some time. Geneticists may point
to this or that gene being defective and predisposal but in most cases this is
not a naturally occurring effect - it is genetic damage caused by the known
causative agents of the blood dyscrasias. This can be seen clearly in large
groups of people who are exposed to causative agents like the 100,000American
troops exposed to the herbicides 2, 4-d (which Edward was also exposed to at
work) and 2,4,5-t, which contain dioxin. The wives of those who bore children
after their husbands' exposure, gave birth to 3,000 spina bifida babies. The
troops themselves have been paid millions of dollars for cancers, neuropathies
and other conditions caused by the herbicides.
The gas
chromatography tests done on those exposed to toxic chemicals, combined with
other laboratory tests, show deficiency of enzymes and knock-on effects on
minerals and vitamins which are exactly the same as the documented atomic bomb
victims. Vitamin C deficiency is apparent in most victims regardless of which
type of exposure. The other deficiencies vary to some degree but some
deficiency is common in all cases.
Acting on this
information, Edward took replacement minerals and vitamins until his blood
counts had reached non life-threatening levels. Some of the minerals and
vitamins e.g. B vitamins, are dangerous if taken in too large a dose and have
been known to cause serious illness. So unless laboratory tests have been
performed showing the exact deficiency levels we do not recommend taking
supplementary vitamins and minerals, Vitamin C being the exception. If taken at
recommended doses, Vitamin C can be a good detoxifier and also strengthens
blood vessels (capillaries can be much weakened when suffering from many blood
disorders causing leakage into tissues and bruising). However, this can take a
long time to complete. Edward's platelet level is still not normal even after
over 10 years.
Without doubt,
a sizeable proportion of those affected by conditions like chronic fatigue are
due to exposure to drugs, chemicals and radiation with its effects on the immune
system. Fatigue is just one of many symptoms documented to be caused by the
same causative agents as blood dyscrasias. We found many who suffered these
symptoms before a more serious condition developed as well as in many less
exposed but who did not develop a blood disorder.
Some years ago,
various medical experts and textbooks (e.g. Bowman and Rand's Pharmacology)
suggested that it would not be long before we knew all the causes of cancer.
That time has now arrived. Most cancers do now have known causes and the
majority could be prevented. Predictably, those selling or whose livelihood
depends on the drugs, chemicals and radiation which cause blood dyscrasias,
leukaemia and other cancers will deny the effects to maximise profits for as
long as possible. This was exactly the case with the tobacco industry for many
years.
One excuse we
hear often is that there is no alternative to this or that product. This is
argued despite the fact that most if not all causative agents have safer, if
less profitable, alternatives, many of which are not essential. A typical
example of this cover-up of causes is the very dangerous practice of solvent
abuse. The medical profession, governments, teachers etc. all know full well
that this is far more dangerous than smoking and yet children are not warned of
this known danger. By observing those in the painting and decorating profession
it is proved that it is dangerous to inhale petroleum fumes from paints. This
is obvious as there is a twenty per cent increase above the normal rate of
cancers, particularly lung cancer, to be found in that profession.
In a modern
world it is impossible to avoid all known causative agents but with a little
care it is possible to avoid the worst effects of the most dangerous ones.
For those already
affected and suffering a blood disorder or having suffered in the past, it has
been shown how important it is to try to avoid further exposures to which one
may be hypersensitised. It has been shown that medical support is by no means
always good or appropriate. Edward lost count of the number of times he stopped
drug infusions because the drip was put up with only air in the tube (which is
not always easily detectable if the drug is not coloured). Any of these
occurrences could have been fatal. Infections, which are often fatal in those
who are immuno-compromised are as often as not contracted whilst in hospital;
therefore, victims and relatives need to be vigilant in demanding care from
medical personnel.
It is unlikely
that ionising radiation will be a problem but large numbers of X-rays should be
avoided if possible.
The most
dangerous and most commonly used chemicals are the benzene related ones.
Absorption can occur through skin contact, inhalation or ingestion, the latter
being the most direct and dangerous route; hence the effects of small amounts
of benzene in prescribed drugs. The chemicals to be avoided include paints,
varnishes, solvent, solvent adhesives (NB children can become addicted to
solvent abuse through the use of correcting fluid), pesticides and herbicides,
dry cleaning, petrol and household cleaning products containing phenol (derived
from benzene). The pathways that cause the blood disorders and cancers from
exposure to benzene are through bioactivation of phenol (the major metabolite
which is highly toxic to and destroys the bone marrow) in the liver. That this
causes genomic changes is well known but is not yet fully understood.
The halogens
chlorine, fluorine and bromine should be avoided if possible, the effects of
which in tap water can increase the effects of other chemicals, radiation and
drugs. Remember the letter we have from MAFF that quotes "All pesticides
are a danger to both human health and the environment". These pesticides
can be found in foods.
Heavy metals
like mercury and lead should also be avoided., as should Arsenic,
Drugs should be
taken with great care by those with blood dyscrasias. So many drugs can cause
these conditions that it is impossible to list them all but those like
painkillers and tranquillisers are mostly not essential so should be avoided.
Antibiotics are also to be avoided if possible and great care should be taken
to avoid infections, with scrupulous attention to cleanliness using a gentle
antibacterial soap (Cidal is a good one). For arthritis sufferers in pain who
have developed a blood disorder due to an arthritic drug, a TENS machine should
be demanded from the doctor as this is completely safe and has been shown to
reduce much pain in most patients. All drugs should be treated with utmost care
and a check made in a drug book like the BNF for side-effects and to see if
there is a safer alternative.
There is little
doubt that to line the pockets of a few, millions have been made ill or killed
by exposure to drugs, chemicals and radiation. Therefore, to a degree, we need
to return to the point before the massive increase in the use of these products
and take responsibility and control of our own health whilst using doctors as
advisors but watching them like a hawk when they reach for their prescription
pad without any examination or investigation of an illness.
An old French
proverb says that "Most men die of their medicines and not their
illnesses."
Bowman
and Rand - Textbook on Pharmacology
American Journal
of Pathology - 1949 Atomic Bomb Victims
Michael
Freemantle - Chemistry in Action
Professor G. C.
de Grouchy - Drug Induced Blood Disorders
Hansard -
Questions and Answers to Parliament 11th January 1989
Ministry of
Agriculture Fisheries and Food - Letter 17th January 1989
Mosby's Medical
and Nursing Dictionary (Fourth edition)
British National
Formulary (BNF) by B.M.A and Pharm. Soc. of Great
Britain (various
edition to March 1996)
Harrisons -
Principals of Internal Medicine
Assoc. of
British Pharmaceutical Ind. (ABPI)
Gaddum's
Pharmacology (8th edition) Oxford Medical Publications
Council on
Pharmacy and Chemistry 6th October 1951 - Toxic Effects of Technical Benzene
Hexachloride (JAMA Vol 147 No.6)
Revue des
Progress Therapeutics No.1 1938
British Journal
of Haematology no. 76 - Bone Marrow Transplantation in Aplastic Anaemia (1990
P401-405 E.R. Komenski, J.M. Hows, J.M. Goldman, J.R. Bachelor. Dept Immunology
and Haematology, Hammersmith Hospital, UK)
C.N. Lewis, L.E.
Putman, F.D. Hendricks, I. Kerlan & H. Welsh - Chloramphenicol in Relation
to Blood Dyscrasias (Antibiotics & Chemotherapy Vol. 11 & 12 December
1952, Food and Drug Administration, Washington)
Prof.Dr. Paul
Ehrlich - About a Case of Anaemia with Observations on Regenerative Changes in
the Bone Marrow (first paper written on the subject 1888)
L. Sanchez-Medal
MD, J.P. Castanedo MD and F. Garcia-Rojas MD - Insecticides and Aplastic
Anaemia (Mexico, Medical Intelligence Vol. 269 No.25, 19th December 1963)
The Lancet -
Idiopathic Aplastic Anaemia (14th January 1961)
James L. Scott,
George E. Cartwright and Maxwell M. Wintrobe - Acquired Aplastic Anaemia: An
Analysis of 39 Cases and Review of the Pertinent Literature (Department of
Internal Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, 1957)
J. Phillip Loge
MD - Aplastic Anaemia Following Exposure to Benzene Hexachloride (Lindane) JAMA
Vol.193 No.2 12th July 1965
The
Pharmaceutical Journal Vol. 251 (2nd October 1993)
The Martindale
Extra Pharmacopoeia (39th edition)
Haematology
Digest 43:98 101.1990 - Aplastic Anaemia associated with Organochlorine
Pesticide (Lindane) (three cases discussed at Royal Liverpool Hospital)
E.C.
Gordon-Smith - Aplastic Anaemia and Other Causes of Bone Marrow Failure (Oxford
Textbook of Medicine)
Patrick
Kinnersley - The Hazards of Work (Pluto Press p153/4. Benzene causing aplastic
anaemia and leukaemia)
Dr. Joe Collier
(Lecturer in Pharmacology) - The Health Conspiracy - How Doctors, the Drug
Industry and the Government Undermine Our Health.
F.M. Corrigan,
S. MacDonald, A. Brown, K. Armstrong & E.M. Armstrong - Neurasthenic
Fatigue, Chemical Sensitivity and GABAa Receptor Toxins (Bute Hospital,
Lockgllphead, Argyll)
Catherine
Caufield - Multiple Exposures (Chronicles of the Radiation Age)
The Guardian -
No-fault Compensation to Nuclear Workers & Cancer in Painters (10th July
1992)
The Guardian -
Leukaemia Statistics in UK (10th May 1990)
E.M. Davies -
Textbook on Adverse Drug Reactions (Oxford University Press)
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