The Autism Research Agenda- The wide range of dysfunctions partly explains why it
is difficult to treat and why we must treat the individual and not the diagnosis
Environmental toxins; Considerable research activity is being conducted into the
roles of environmental toxins in autism. The increased mercury (Hg) body burden,
whether derived from thimerosal in vaccines, elevated levels in the environment/food
chain or a decreased ability to eliminate Hg from the body, or indeed all three,
remains an important research topic. However, Hg is not the only important elemental
toxin as arsenic, antimony, lead, tin and aluminium are also neurotoxins both individually
and collectively. As these are often controversial, due to vaccine inclusion or environmental
contamination, their study and implication as causative factors has been largely
ignored by mainstream research. In addition, to elemental inorganic toxins the organic
pollutants, including dioxins, PCBs and organochlorine and organophosphate pesticides
have also been implicated in neural disorders. In particular, the polybrominated
biphenyl ethers (PBDEs), that have been used as flame retardants since the 1980s,
have recently been implicated in the rise of autism due to their increased use paralleling
the increase in autism diagnosis post-1985 as well as their known effects as endocrine
disruptors and pro-oxidants.
Following on logically from environmental toxins is the issue of increased pro-oxidant
activity or reduced antioxidant activity which has been recorded by numerous autism
researchers in particular by Dr Jill James and co-workers.
Pro-oxidants increased oxidative damage to cells and tissues and result in inflammation.
The metabolism of inorganic and organic toxins can promote oxidation and subsequent
reduction of protective antioxidants that ultimately results in inflammatory reactions
that damage cells, tissues and enzymes etc. Pro-oxidants can arise from other sources
apart from toxins and their activity may be exacerbated by metabolic deficiencies
in patients with autism. These include problems with methylation and transulphuration
activities that have been identified in patients with autism and can disrupt metabolism,
particularly related to detoxification as well as direct damage to DNA. Considerable
research in this area has been conducted by Dr Richard Deth and co-workers.
One method of improving methylation activity that has aroused considerable research
interest has been the use methyl-vitamin B12, either as an intra-muscular injection
or as a nasal spray. Many patients with autism have shown great benefits from this
therapy and future research would look to improve methodologies as well as more effectively
target the responders from within the autism spectrum.
Obviously cellular damage that increases inflammation is also relevant to the occurrence
of GI problems in autism and may result in enterocolitis but inflammation can be
much more extensive in autism affecting all tissues including the brain thereby affecting
neuronal signalling as well as immune functions that rely on controlled oxidation
to identify and eliminate pathogens as well as maintaining a balance between the
pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines that are vital in immune integrity.
Inflammation is also implicated in the response to viral infection, including measles,
rubella and others. Research has investigated methods of reducing viral body burdens
by attenuating damage and promoting the bodies healing mechanisms. One of these has
lead to the use of high dose vitamin A thereby as a method of viral removal in children
with autism as described by Drs MacCandless, Baker and others.
Related to oxidative tissue damage and inflammation has been the recent pioneering
work using HyperBaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) as a means of reducing damage to the
body arising from inflammatory activity. The treatment involves subjecting the patient
to increased levels of oxygen, at increased pressure in a hyperbaric chamber for
several hours. The early results of this therapy look promising and we await the
results of future research with great interest.
Another important area of research has been the development of chelation therapy
to remove the elemental toxins described above. This has involved the use of oral,
transdermal and IV administration of chelating agents that enter cells and bind
to HG, Pb etc and allow their excretion in urine and faeces. The use of these compounds
is not without risk but providing appropriate monitoring measures are used on a routine
basis to assess patient health they can often bring great benefits in health and
behaviour in individuals with autism.
While there is no doubt that the use of a gluten/casein-free (GF-CF) diet can benefit
a great many children with autism the mechanism of action as well as the number of
children who benefit still remains controversial and is the subject of ongoing research.
The opiod peptide theory, as suggested by Shattock and co-workers, has never been
convincingly proved and it is important for the adoption of this dietary intervention
into mainstream medicine that research on the therapeutic mechanism of this diet
is conducted in the near future. In addition to the GF-CF diet other restricted nutrient
diets including the low oxalate, ketogenic and Specific Carbohydrate diets (SCD)
have also proved beneficial for some patients with autism but more research is required
to prove their efficacy and mechanism of action.
Lastly, but of considerable importance, is the identification of specific nutrient
deficiencies in vitamins, minerals and fatty acids, that can be treated by supplementation
of the diet with the specific nutrients. Some of these such as high-dose Vit B6/magnesium
therapy, that were pioneered by the late Dr Bernard Rimland, have been successfully
used for many years, yet still remain sceptical in the eyes of mainstream medicine.
Many others nutrient therapies, that are usually multi-component, have been useful
biomedical interventions but because they are multi rather than single nutrient interventions
they have not been tested in double-blind placebo controlled trials and are therefore
treated with scepticism by many clinicians. Likewise the use of the highly unsaturated
fatty acids, principally EPA and DHA, has proved beneficial in a great many children.
Further research needs to be conducted firstly to prove that these nutrient deficiencies
exist in children with autism, and secondly to apply double-blind placebo controlled
trials with groups of patients with autism to prove their efficacy as reliable treatment
options.