Showing posts with label autism rate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label autism rate. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2009

New Theory Of Autism Suggests Symptoms Or Disorder May Be Reversible

Science Daily - Apr. 2, 2009
Scientists at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have proposed a sweeping new theory of autism that suggests that the brains of people with autism are structurally normal but dysregulated, meaning symptoms of the disorder might be reversible.


The central tenet of the theory, published in the March issue of Brain Research Reviews, is that autism is a developmental disorder caused by impaired regulation of the locus coeruleus, a bundle of neurons in the brain stem that processes sensory signals from all areas of the body.

The new theory stems from decades of anecdotal observations that some autistic children seem to improve when they have a fever, only to regress when the fever ebbs. A 2007 study in the journal Pediatrics took a more rigorous look at fever and autism, observing autistic children during and after fever episodes and comparing their behavior with autistic children who didn't have fevers. This study documented that autistic children experience behavior changes during fever.

"On a positive note, we are talking about a brain region that is not irrevocably altered. It gives us hope that, with novel therapies, we will eventually be able to help people with autism," says theory co-author Mark F. Mehler, M.D., chairman of neurology and director of the Institute for Brain Disorders and Neural Regeneration at Einstein.

Autism is a complex developmental disability that affects a person's ability to communicate and interact with others. It usually appears during the first three years of life. Autism is called a "spectrum disorder" since it affects individuals differently and to varying degrees. It is estimated that one in every 150 American children has some degree of autism.

Einstein researchers contend that scientific evidence directly points to the locus coeruleus–noradrenergic (LC-NA) system as being involved in autism.
"The LC-NA system is the only brain system involved both in producing fever and controlling behavior," says co-author Dominick P. Purpura, M.D., dean emeritus and distinguished professor of neuroscience at Einstein.

The locus coeruleus has widespread connections to brain regions that process sensory information. It secretes most of the brain's noradrenaline, a neurotransmitter that plays a key role in arousal mechanisms, such as the "fight or flight" response. It is also involved in a variety of complex behaviors, such as attentional focusing (the ability to concentrate attention on environmental cues relevant to the task in hand, or to switch attention from one task to another). Poor attentional focusing is a defining characteristic of autism.

"What is unique about the locus coeruleus is that it activates almost all higher-order brain centers that are involved in complex cognitive tasks," says Dr. Mehler.


Drs. Purpura and Mehler hypothesize that in autism, the LC-NA system is dysregulated by the interplay of environment, genetic, and epigenetic factors (chemical substances both within as well as outside the genome that regulate the expression of genes). They believe that stress plays a central role in dysregulation of the LC-NA system, especially in the latter stages of prenatal development when the fetal brain is particularly vulnerable.

As evidence, the researchers point to a 2008 study, published in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, that found a higher incidence of autism among children whose mothers had been exposed to hurricanes and tropical storms during pregnancy. Maternal exposure to severe storms at mid-gestation resulted in the highest prevalence of autism.

Drs. Purpura and Mehler believe that, in autistic children, fever stimulates the LC-NA system, temporarily restoring its normal regulatory function.
"This could not happen if autism was caused by a lesion or some structural abnormality of the brain," says Dr. Purpura.

"This gives us hope that we will eventually be able to do something for people with autism," he adds.


The researchers do not advocate fever therapy (fever induced by artificial means), which would be an overly broad, and perhaps even dangerous, remedy. Instead, they say, the future of autism treatment probably lies in drugs that selectively target certain types of noradrenergic brain receptors or, more likely, in epigenetic therapies targeting genes of the LC-NA system.

"If the locus coeruleus is impaired in autism, it is probably because tens or hundreds, maybe even thousands, of genes are dysregulated in subtle and complex ways," says Dr. Mehler. "The only way you can reverse this process is with epigenetic therapies, which, we are beginning to learn, have the ability to coordinate very large integrated gene networks."

"The message here is one of hope but also one of caution," Dr. Mehler adds. "You can't take a complex neuropsychiatric disease that has escaped our understanding for 50 years and in one fell swoop have a therapy that is going to reverse it — that's folly. On the other hand, we now have clues to the neurobiology, the genetics, and the epigenetics of autism. To move forward, we need to invest more money in basic science to look at the genome and the epigenome in a more focused way."


Journal reference:

1. Mehler et al. Autism, fever, epigenetics and the locus coeruleus. Brain Research Reviews, 2009; 59 (2): 388 DOI: 10.1016/j.brainresrev.2008.11.001

Adapted from materials provided by Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Read more in Science Daily

Monday, June 25, 2007

Conflict-of-Interest Reporting Serves to Replace Fact With Fiction in Vaccine Injury Cases

PRNewswire-USNewswire - Monday, June 25, 2007

WASHINGTON -- With the Autism Omnibus Proceedings now in the second week of testimony in the US Court of Federal Claims, advocates for vaccine-injured children are calling the bulk of media accounts biased against families.

Often presented as ironclad in many media accounts, the misinformation parents and advocacy organizations note as appearing most frequently in mainstream news include:
-- the 2004 IOM report suggesting that research involving thimerosal be discontinued, even though the committee considering the research presented disregarded clinical investigation in favor of epidemiology conducted in Europe and funded primarily by drug companies and public health agencies
-- the assertion that the autism rate of one in 150 children is attributable to better diagnosing, while the symptoms associated with autism are profound, and according to parents and professionals alike "can't be missed"
-- the claim that the mercury-based preservative thimerosal has been removed from all vaccines, although most flu shots and several other vaccines still contain 25 micrograms mercury, an amount considered unsafe by government guidelines for anyone weighing under 550 lbs.

(See Vaccines Safety for a current list of vaccines and thimerosal content.)

-- that there is no science linking vaccines to autism, even though many peer-reviewed published studies confirm the link between mercury and neurological injuries with symptoms nearly identical to autism spectrum disorders (

View some of the relevant studies.

The use of spokespersons with ties to drug companies in news accounts has also been cited as form of bias. Dr. Paul Offit has been quoted frequently in defense of the practice of injecting mercury into pregnant women and young children. Dr. Offit's work has been funded for over 15 years by pharmaceutical giant Merck, with whom he is co-patent holder of the RotaTeq vaccine. The FDA announced last week that RotaTeq will now carry a label warning for pediatricians and parents about the vaccine's link to Kawasaki Disease, considered one of the leading causes of acquired heart disease among children in the US.
During the first week of the hearings, an NBC Today show segment featuring former Johnson & Johnson vice president Dr. Nancy Snyderman drew further criticism when Snyderman suggested that parents involved in the autism hearings were motivated by financial gain.
"Apparently, Dr. Snyderman is either completely ignorant of the emotional and financial devastation to families of children suffering from vaccine-related injuries or she's speaking on behalf of her former employer. Either way, it's unacceptable,"
commented NAA president and parent Wendy Fournier. Dr. Snyderman's former employment with Johnson & Johnson was not disclosed to viewers.
Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Ortho Clinical Diagnostics is involved in litigation for injuries, including autism, associated with its thimerosal- containing Rh immune globulin product, RhoGAM.
For more information, or contacts: Wendy Fournier (Portsmouth, RI) 401-632-7523 Rita Shreffler (Nixa, MO) 401-632-6452
National Autism Association or see National Autism Associates Website.

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