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Sick Monkeys: Research Links Vaccine Load, Autism Signs
By Dan Olmsted www.ageofautism.com
The first research project to examine effects of the total vaccine load received
by children in the 1990s has found autism-like signs and symptoms in infant monkeys
vaccinated the same way. The study's principal investigator, Laura Hewitson from
the University of Pittsburgh, reports developmental delays, behavior problems and
brain changes in macaque monkeys that mimic "certain neurological abnormalities of
autism."
The findings are being reported Friday and Saturday at a major international
autism conference in London.
Although couched in scientific language, Hewitson's findings
are explosive. They suggest, for the first time, that our closest animal cousins
develop characteristics of autism when subjected to the same immunizations – such
as the MMR shot -- and vaccine formulations – such as the mercury preservative thimerosal
-- that American children received when autism diagnoses exploded in the 1990s.
The
first publicly reported results of this research project come in both oral and poster
presentations on Friday and Saturday at the International Meeting For Autism Research
in London. Poster presentations must go through a form of peer review before they
are presented at the conference; the papers have not yet appeared in a scientific
journal.
In addition to Hewitson's oral presentation today, on Saturday in one of
two related poster presentations, the researchers also are reporting in their abstract
that "vaccinated animals exhibited progressively severe chronic active inflammation
[in gastrointestinal tissue] whereas unexposed animals did not We have found many
significant differences in the GI tissue gene expression profiles between vaccinated
and unvaccinated animals." Numerous scientific studies, as well as many parents,
report severe GI ailments in children with regressive autism.
The results are sure
to be controversial, in part because they lend credence to studies first published
in 1998 by British pediatric gastroenterologist Andrew Wakefield, one of Hewitson's
co-authors on these findings. He described an unusual inflammatory bowel condition
in children who had regressed into autism after they received the measles-mumps-rubella
(MMR) vaccination. Wakefield is currently fighting charges of medical misconduct
in Britain over allegations of conflict-of-interest and improper procedures related
to that paper. He denies the charges.
In the program for the conference, the 7th Annual
International Meeting for Autism Research (IMFAR), there are three separate presentations
listed that report results from the overall research program. The first, an oral
presentation entitled "Pediatric Vaccines Influence Primate Behavior, and Amygdala
Growth and Opioid Ligand Binding" (the "amygdala abstract") was led by Dr. Hewitson
and lists 12 co-authors, including five of her colleagues from the University of
Pittsburgh and Dr. Wakefield. Other authors are chemists, pathologists and psychologists
from the universities of Kentucky, California-Irvine, and Washington.
Hewitson's introductory
presentation will be followed by two poster presentations on Saturday; one of the
two, "Pediatric Vaccines Influence Primate Behavior, and Brain Stem Volume and Opioid
Ligand Binding", was led by Wakefield and includes six additional co-authors.
It focuses
on the developmental effect of vaccine exposures on brain growth during infancy.
The second, "Microarray Analysis of GI Tissue in a Macaque Model of the Effects of
Infant Vaccination," was led by Steven Walker of Wake Forest University and performed
gene array analysis on the intestinal tissues of the vaccinated and unvaccinated
monkeys.
The studies address – albeit in animals, not children -- one of the major
criticisms by parents and scientists concerned about a possible link between the
greatly stepped-up immunization schedule in the 1990s, including higher exposure
to the mercury preservative, and autism. While the Food and Drug Administration approves
individual vaccines as safe and effective, and an advisory committee to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the childhood immunization schedule
adopted by the states, the overall health outcomes from the total vaccine load, versus
no vaccinations at all, have never been compared, the authors said.
A bill requiring
the government to conduct a study of autism rates in unvaccinated American children
is pending in the U.S. House of Representatives, co-sponsored by Reps. Carolyn Maloney
(D-N.Y.) and Tom Osborne (R.-Neb.). Just this week, former National Institutes of
Health Director Bernadine Healy called for more research into a possible vaccine
link to autism and said the question had not been settled, despite repeated assertions
to that effect by the CDC, the Institute of Medicine and the American Academy of
Pediatrics.
In the abstract for today's oral presentation, the authors noted that
macaques, the type of monkey used in the study, "are commonly used in pre-clinical
vaccine safety testing, but the combined childhood vaccine regimen, rather than individual
vaccines, has not been studied. Childhood vaccines are a possible causal factor in
autism, and abnormal behaviors and anomalous amygdala growth are potentially inter-related
features of this condition."
The study found evidence of both behavioral and biological
changes after the 13 macaque monkey infants were administered proportional doses,
adjusted for age, of the vaccines recommended between 1994 and 1999. Three monkeys
were not given any vaccines.
"Primate development, cognition and social behavior were
assessed for both vaccinated and unvaccinated infants using standardized tests developed
at the Washington National Primate Research Center." MRI and PET scans looked for
brain changes after administration of the MMR.
"Compared with unexposed animals, significant
neurodevelopmental deficits were evident for exposed animals in survival reflexes,
tests of color discrimination and reversal, and learning sets," the authors reported.
"Differences in behaviors were observed between exposed and unexposed animals and
within the exposed group before and after MMR vaccination. Compared with unexposed
animals, exposed animals showed attenuation of amygdala growth and differences in
the amygdala binding of [11C]diprenorphine. Interaction models identified significant
associations between specific aberrant social and non-social behaviors, isotope binding,
and vaccine exposure."
One of the Saturday abstracts makes the further point that
the research "revealed significant differences between exposed and unexposed animals"
in the kinds of developmental behaviors a mother might be able to observe, "with
delayed acquisition of root, suck, clasp hand, and clasp foot reflexes." They conclude
by noting that "This animal model examines the neurological consequences of the childhood
vaccine regimen, Functional and … brainstem anomalies were evident in vaccinated
animals that may be relevant to some aspects of autism. The findings raise important
safety issues while providing a potential animal model for examining aspects of causation
and disease pathogenesis in acquired neurodevelopmental disorders"