by Barbara Loe Fisher
www.vaccineawakening.blogspot.com
www.NVIC.org
www.StandUpBeCounted.org
As the latest study attempting to disprove a link between vaccination and autism
demonstrates: if you really don't want to know the answer, just ask part of the
question. When medical researchers take a reductionist approach to investigating
vaccine risks, the public can always count on spin doctors to position the
conclusions of a narrowly focused study in a way that appears to totally
exonerate vaccines from association with all risks, especially autism.
The most recent paper purporting to clear MMR vaccine from any relationship with
the development of regressive autism in previously healthy children was
published by researchers at the CDC and Columbia University in the online
journal of
Public Library of Science . The authors report on a federally funded
initiative to address the hypothesis published in 1998 by Andrew Wakefield, M.D.
and others that some children who receive MMR vaccine develop inflammatory bowel
disease and regressive autism due to persistent measles virus (MV) infection.
The examination by three laboratories of intestinal tissues from 25 autistic
children, five of whom developed gastrointestinal (GI) and autistic symptoms
after MMR vaccination, confirmed the presence of measles virus RNA in one child
with autism and one control case. Even though the study only included five
children who were previously healthy before regressing into autism after MMR
vaccination, it is being touted as concrete proof that MMR vaccine is not in any
way involved in the development of regressive autism in previously healthy
children.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
While Wakefield may have imperfectly described the biological mechanism for
development of MMR vaccine induced autism in 1998 (proposing a persistent
measles virus infection in the GI tract that affected the brain), he certainly
DID correctly report an association between receipt of MMR vaccine in previously
healthy children and subsequent simultaneous development of serious bowel
disease and autism. It was an important clinical observation and call for
further research published in a respected medical journal (The Lancet) but one
that Wakefield and his colleagues would pay for dearly. The hypothesis has been
furiously denounced for a decade by mandatory vaccination proponents in
government, industry, and medical organizations in Europe and the U.S. as they
scramble to defend aggressive one-size-fits-all MMR vaccine policies being used
in measles eradication campaigns worldwide.
Thoughtful House, a pediatric care facility and research institute in Austin,
Texas founded by Dr. Wakefield, issued a response to the study which said in
part: "We are pleased to see that this new study provides further
confirmation that children with autism suffer from gastrointestinal problems
that deserve to be addressed as a priority. Dr. Andrew Wakefield, Executive
Director of Thoughtful House Center for Children, whose work has focused on
intestinal disease, and on the possible role of MMR vaccine in regressive autism
in children with GI symptoms, welcomed these new findings. Dr. Wakefield was a
co-author of the 2002 paper that, unlike yesterday's study, examined children in
the majority of whom there was a clear temporal link between MMR exposure and
regression. Dr. Wakefield comments, "The search for the 'footprints' of measles
virus in the intestine is merited, based upon the previous findings and the
intestinal disease that is commonly found in these children. This new study
rules out only one possibility - that the measles virus must remain for the long
term in the intestine. We need to consider that the MMR vaccine can cause autism
as a hit-and-run injury, but not necessarily leave the measles virus behind."
The biological mechanism for MMR vaccine induced regressive autism - as well as
autism that develops in previously healthy children following injection with
other vaccines like DPT/DTaP, hepatitis B, varicella zoster, pneumococcal -
could well involve an interaction between individual genetic vulnerabilities
(autoimmunity, allergy) and the known ability of drugs and vaccines to induce
immune mediated inflammation in the body, especially brain inflammation. The
most serious and feared complication of the very first vaccines - smallpox and
rabies - is inflammation of the brain (encephalitis/encephalopathy), which can
be mild or severe with a constellation of acute symptoms that are subtle (deep
sleep with difficulty arousing) to dramatic (convulsions, high pitched
screaming).
Mild to severe brain inflammation can lead to permanent brain dysfunction in at
least one-third or more of all who experience it. The residual effects of brain
inflammation can vary from learning disabilities and ADHD/ADD to medication
resistant seizure disorders, autistic behaviors and mental retardation.
In 1998, officials of the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP)
published a review of vaccine injury and death claims submitted to the VICP
involving measles vaccine either alone or in combination (such as MMR). They
analyzed the medical records of 48 children ages 10 to 49 months who either had
died or suffered mental regression and retardation, chronic seizures, motor and
sensory deficits and movement disorders following receipt of measles containing
vaccines. The authors concluded that "The onset of neurologic signs or symptoms
occurred with a nonrandom, statistically significant distribution of cases on
days 8 and 9" and "This clustering suggests that a causal relationship between
measles vaccine and encephalopathy may exist as a rare complication of measles
immunization."
Immune mediated chronic inflammation of the brain, gastrointestinal tract and
other parts of the body in previously healthy children following receipt of MMR
and other vaccines may not be as rare as CDC officials would have the public
believe.
Researchers have found
evidence of chronic inflammation in the brains of patients with autism,
particularly in the cerebellum. Brains of those suffering with autism have been
observed to be in "a chronic state of specific cytokine activity." The suggested
biological mechanisms for the observed brain inflammation included chronic
disease or an external environmental source. In addition, there is a good
possibility that genetic predisposition to immune system dysfunction
(autoimmunity, allergy) may be a key to development of regressive autism
following vaccination in some children.
The recent study out of the CDC and Columbia University is not good enough
evidence to disprove the autism-MMR link first reported by Wakefield and others
in 1998. The scope of the most recent investigation was far too narrow and
enlightened pediatricians and informed parents know it. As
autism advocate Rick Rollens and
national autism groups have pointed out, more methodologically sound
research must be done before the public jury questioning MMR vaccine safety will
stand down. A good start would be a prospective case controlled study comparing
immune and brain function of highly vaccinated children to that of unvaccinated
children for a period of at least ten years, which has been requested by parents
of vaccine injured children for several decades.
For a comprehensive summary of the decade- long persecution that Andrew
Wakefield has endured at the hands of individuals with major financial conflicts
of interest with government and industry, visit the Cryshame website at
http://www.cryshame. net/ maintained in Great Britain. A new essay by
British journalist Martin Walker entitled "An Interest in Conflict" examines the
tactics used by those determined to punish Wakefield for daring to publish an
hypothesis discussing the association between vaccines and autism.
The Cryshame website also features a
video tutorial by British pediatrician Richard Halvorson on measles, mumps,
rubella, and MMR vaccine. Questions Dr. Halvorsen poses and answers include:
· How dangerous is measles?
· Is measles a killer?
· Can measles be good for you?
· Does vaccination give life-long protection?
· Is MMR necessary?
COMING UP IN THE NEWS: On Monday, Sept. 8, the Dr. Mehmet Oz show on the
Oprah & Friends Network is scheduled to broadcast a radio debate on hepatitis B
vaccine (
http://www. oprah.com/oafhost/moz); On Tuesday, Sept. 9 the new daytime CBS
show "The Doctors" will feature a segment on Gardasil vaccine; On Sept. 18, "The
Doctors" will broadcast a segment on mandatory vaccination. For more information
or to post a comment after the segments have aired, go to
http://www.tvweek.com/ne ws/2008/09/video_cbs_tv_distributions_the.php