On Autoimmunity and the Blood-Brain Barrier
I am responding to the post of 9/23 about autoimmunity and
the connection with a faulty blood-brain barrier. The blood-brain barrier is not
intact in infants until at least 6 weeks of life. This is why a newborn with a fever
must be subjected to a spinal tap to rule out menningitis. Any virus or bacteria
that a newborn is exposed to can go directly to the nervous system.
This is why the Hepatitis B vaccine at birth is so
dangerous. Between 1991 and 1999, when the shot contained thimerisol, giving it at birth
would have resulted in mercury crossing into the brain since the blood-brain barrier was
not yet intact. As a nurse, I'm concerned that this information about the normal
timing of a blood-brain barrier forming is not more readily known.
I think this normal delay in the forming of a blood-brain
barrier is an important piece of the puzzle and one of the reasons for the surge of autism
in the 90's.
Mary Barbera RN, MSN