xmlns:o="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office"
xmlns:w="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:word"
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40">
May 27 2001
Autism
linked to mercury vaccine
Rosie Waterhouse
http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/sti/2001/05/27/stinwenws02006.html
MERCURY in vaccines for babies and infants could be the
cause of a steep rise in cases of autism in children around the world,
according to a growing number of scientists.
The increase in reports of autism in Britain, America and
some other countries coincides with a growth in the number of inoculations
given to young children, say the researchers.
Many of the vaccines contain a preservative called
thiomersal, which is 49.6% mercury - a substance known to have neurotoxic
effects, especially in infants whose brains are still developing. Symptoms are
similar to those displayed by autistic children.
Autism is a spectrum of disorders which range in severity
from bizarre, violent behaviour to an inability to communicate or interact socially,
along with repetitive patterns of behaviour.
Estimates of the prevalence of the syndrome in Britain
range from 10 cases per 10,000 of the population with classic autism, to 9.1
cases per 1,000 showing some signs of autistic behaviour.
The National Autistic Society estimates that there are
about 500,000 people with autism in Britain, 120,000 of them children.
According to one recent study, there has been a tenfold increase among children
between 1984 and 1994.
The new possible explanation of the rise has emerged after
a two-month review of all the available information by The Sunday Times.
Several groups of academics and researchers in America and Sweden are
investigating similar theories that a combination of factors is to blame.
They include a genetic predisposition, the cumulative
effects of mercury in vaccines lowering the immune system, with the
controversial measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) triple vaccine being a possible
trigger.
The US Institute of Medicine is so concerned that
officials have organised a two-day meeting in July to discuss the hypothesis
that thiomersal and mercury in vaccines are linked to autism.
Boyd Haley, chemistry professor at the University of
Kentucky, has been asked to submit a paper. Thiomersal is extremely toxic. The
preliminary data is convincing and does indicate that vaccines are the most
likely suspect for causing autism, he said.
In general, the researchers argue, the cumulative effects
of mercury impair brain development and damage the childs immune system and
gastrointestinal tract, resulting in hypersensitivity to toxic environmental
substances.
This build-up could lead to autism or a form of mercury
poisoning - whose symptoms are similar. In addition, researchers believe, the
MMR triple vaccine, usually given at 18 months to two years, could trigger
autism because the damaged immune system cannot cope with three live viruses at
once.
Only some children exposed to mercury will develop
symptoms. Researchers believe this indicates that there may be a genetic
predisposition. This theory was reinforced by a study published this month
which showed that in 99% of autistic children a family of proteins essential
for disposing of mercury and other heavy metals is missing or disabled.
The proteins, called metallothionein (MT), are the main
way in which the body counters heavy metal. The study, by the Chicago-based
Pfeiffer Centre, a health research institute, found that of 503 autistic
patients 499 showed an MT dysfunction.
The number of vaccinations given to babies and children in
Britain and America has increased significantly. In the United States the
number given before the age of two has risen from eight in 1980 to 22 now. In Britain in 1970, most children received diphtheria,
tetanus, polio, whooping cough and BCG for tuberculosis; about half were also
immunised against measles. In 1972 rubella was added; MMR in 1988, Hib
(Haemophilus Influenza type b), against a form of meningitis in 1992, MMR as a
second dose in 1996, and meningitis C in 1999.
The MMR first dose is given between 12 and 15 months, with
diphtheria and tetanus and the second dose of MMR at three to five years. Like tens of thousands of other children,
Melissa Wickens, 10, underwent a full course of inoculations. When she was just
14 months, after she had received her MMR jab, her life changed.
From being an alert, normal child, her behaviour became
erratic. Typically, when she arrives home from school she throws down her
fluffy red school bag and pulls everything out of it. In the kitchen she
snatches a box of breakfast cereal and crams flakes into her mouth. Later she
smears strawberries over herself and her bedroom upstairs.
She has already broken several television sets and throws
chairs around the sitting room and pulls down shelves. Melissa, who was given
the MMR vaccine in 1992, has severely regressive autism and inflammatory bowel
disease. On the same day as the MMR
she started a high-pitched screaming, said her mother Marion Wickens, from
Brighton. Over the next few weeks she cried inconsolably, started to bite
herself and to pull out her hair, resulting in bald patches on her head.
She used to have a lovely sparkle in her eyes but they
went blank. She couldnt understand Wheres mummy? any more. It no longer
registered. She concluded: Melissa wasnt born autistic, she regressed.
MMR does not contain thiomersal, though other child
vaccines do. Thiomersal was introduced in the 1930s as a preservative and went
into common use without review by Americas Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
because it was assumed to be safe.
In America, researchers found some infants who are being
vaccinated using multidose vials with thiomersal can receive 62.5 micrograms of
mercury per visit. This is 100 times more than the intake considered safe for
the average six-month-old by the US Environmental Protection Agency. In June 1999 the FDA discovered that:
Infants who receive thiomersal-containing vaccine at several visits may have
been exposed to more mercury than recommended by Federal guidelines. The
following month the European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products
(EMEA) issued a statement saying: Cumulative exposure to ethylmercury [found
in thiomersal] . . . could lead to a potential cause for concern.
In May last year, a scientist from the US Centres for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) gave a presentation, based on a study of
the Vaccine Safety Datalink Project - a database of 400,000 children - with
evidence of harm. Dr Thomas Verstraeten
of the CDC found the screening analysis suggests statistically significant
associations between certain neurologic developmental disorders - such as
attention deficit disorder, and speech and language disorders - and exposure to
mercury from thiomersal-containing vaccines before the age of six months.
As a result, the EMEA issued another statement last June,
saying: For vaccination in infants and toddlers, as a precautionary measure it
would be prudent to promote the general use of vaccines without thiomersal.
Moreover, the use of thiomersal-free vaccines should be recommended for
newborns. Neither of these EMEA statements received national newspaper
publicity in Britain, and at least 10 thiomersal-containing vaccines for
children are still in use as drug manufacturers are permitted to finish
stocks. Jane Maroney El-Dahr, an
immunologist at Tulane University medical centre in New Orleans, said: It is
important for me to emphasise that the message is not to not vaccinate
children, but to make sure that vaccines are thiomersal-free.
The health department said: Thiomersal has played an
important role as a preservative in vaccines.
Because thiomersal contains mercury, both European and
American regulators have recently recommended that vaccine manufacturers phase
out its use wherever possible as a precaution. They have not recommended the
withdrawal of any vaccines.
While there is substantial evidence that MMR vaccine -
which is a live vaccine and therefore contains no thiomersal - is not a factor,
the cause of autism remains unknown.
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.