[back] Alzheimer's and vaccines
Are Vaccinations Causing Early Alzheimer’s?
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Byron Richards, CCN
NaturalNews) The issue of cognitive decline and the more advanced
Alzheimer's disease is predicted to be a public health crisis in America over
the next 20 years, as the swell of baby boomers hits the age when problems
manifest. This past week the Wall Street Journal ran an article on a man getting
Alzheimer's in his 40s, one of 500,000 Americans with early onset. The notion
that this problem is striking ever earlier sent shock waves through the country
and left people wondering why this is happening.
Clearly, there are many inflammatory factors in a person's life and
gene-related weaknesses are involved. However, theoretical data on the
inflammatory nature of vaccines, especially in the large numbers given to
children at an early age while their nerves are developing response patterns for
future life, means that they cannot be ruled out as one main factor that primes
the Alzheimer's pump.
How inflammation causes Alzhimer's
We already know from existing research the recipe that leads to
Alzheimer's risk. Data coming from the Canadian Study of Health and Aging found
that aging in general, fewer years of education (less brain exercise), and the
apolipoprotein E epsilon4 allele were significantly associated with increased
risk of Alzheimer's disease. Other research has shown that heavy smoking and
drinking speed the onset of Alzheimer's. A sluggish thyroid also increases the
risk.
On the other hand the Canadian researchers found that the use of
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, wine consumption, coffee consumption, and
regular physical activity were associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer's
disease. There are many great anti-inflammatory nutrients that readily replace
the concept of drug use, including the grape seed extracts of red wine (which
have been shown to reduce Alzheimer's plaque formation).
Natural vitamin E at the dose of 2000 IU per day has been shown to extend
the life of Alzheimer's patients by two years. DHA and folic acid have been
shown to be protective against Alzheimer's. Moderate coffee intake has a
brain-activating effect, which would be synergistic with learning or other forms
of constructive brain exercise that help keep your brain cells fit. Physical
exercise is proven to elevate levels of brain-derived neurotropic factor (BDNF)
vital for your brain to withstand stress and inflammation and keep your brain
cells living longer in a healthier condition. The common theme is that using
your brain constructively helps keep it fit and factors that induce brain
inflammation, of which there are many, send you in the wrong direction.
Besides the above, obvious factors that cause brain inflammation include a
lack of sleep, emotional stress, physical exhaustion, cell phone use, and a poor
quality diet. This means that there will never be a specific cause of
Alzheimer's identified, other than the idea that too much inflammation combined
with genetic weaknesses will lead to the problem. Too much inflammation is the
common theme behind all nerve-related diseases, heart disease, and cancer. Thus,
the manifestation of various shades of cognitive decline will be common in the
overall population and progression into full Alzheimer's, compared to some other
serious problem, will depend on genetic weak spots.
For example, healthy children of Alzheimer's patients have adverse changes
in their brain structure before any symptoms appear. The greater the amount of
inflammation, combined with an individual's ability to tolerate inflammation,
will determine the age of onset.
Recently researchers did autopsies on the brains of individuals who
maintained sharp memory into their 80s. Those with sharp memory compared to the
brains of those with "normal aging" had far less brain tangles. Thus we see a
sliding scale of tangles, going from virtually none in true health, to the
common averages of "normal aging," down into the diseased ranges of cognitive
decline, and eventually into Alzheimer's. With this understanding, "normal
aging" can be seen as abnormal from an optimal health point of view. Such brain
tangles are driven by inflammatory processes.
The Immunization-Alzheimer's Controversy
The adjuvants used in vaccines (putting the mercury issue aside) are
intentionally highly inflammatory so as to provoke a more active immune response
to the weakened pathogen. The fact that American children are the most
vaccinated in the world at such an early age, when their brains are setting up
shop, runs the high risk that vaccinations will "train" nerves to become more
hyper-active to future inflammatory stress of any kind.
Such issues would be magnified if a child had a history of stress in the
womb, stress as an infant (unstable environment), poor nutrition in the womb or
early life, other health problems as an infant, or has family-related gene
weaknesses predisposing to Alzheimer's (or any other nerve-related disease for
that matter). These massive numbers of early vaccinations could easily set the
stage for early onset Alzheimer's. At this point there is absolutely no science
that refutes this theory, and plenty of science to predict it.
Our government, bless their little hearts, has no interest in proving this
not to be the case or in figuring out a safety threshold for the number of
vaccines or the age they are given. Rather, they operate on the assumption that
any number of vaccines is harmless. This public health mentality of "fire a shot
gun and ask questions later" (or never ask any questions at all) is good for
herd mentality and not so good for personalized wellness and quality of life.
Any notion that the treatment is problematic, such as a contributor to
autism, is met with flat out denial. It does not matter to them what data is
presented or what new science obviously predicts. Our government's illness is
their bizarre concept of control at all costs by unelected bureaucrats, risks be
dammed. The bottom line, our government doesn't actually care what adverse
effects vaccinations may cause to your child, they are treating a herd.
1,000% Increase in Alzheimer's Risk
This issue flared up back in 1997 when a leading proponent of the
vaccine-autism link, Hugh Fudenberg, MD, presented his research at the NVIC
International Vaccine Conference, Arlington, VA. His data showed that if an
individual had five consecutive flu shots between 1970 and 1980 (the years
studied) his / her chances of getting Alzheimer's disease is 10 times higher
than if he / she had one, two, or no shots. This data was never published in a
peer reviewed journal. Supporters of Fudenberg describe him as "the world's
leading immunogeneticist and 13th most quoted biologist of our times (nearly 850
papers in peer review journals)."
The Alzheimer's Association website attempts to discredit Fudenberg, but
not the data he presented, stating that his "license was suspended by the South
Carolina Board of Medical Examiners." This is true, but that was due to a
classic witch hunt because of his anti-vaccine position. The Alzheimer's
Association went on to reference a meaningless study in which those with a
negligible vaccine history had no apparent risk of Alzheimer's. The data does
not begin to approximate the potential risk of massive numbers of vaccines given
to American children and future Alzheimer's risk.
Thus, the question of the immunization link to Alzheimer's is an
open-ended and controversial issue. A responsible government would have demanded
animal studies with different levels of immunizations at different ages in
relation to the onset of Alzheimer's. These studies aren't being conducted
because OUR GOVERNMENT DOES NOT WANT TO KNOW THE ANSWER.
Since Americans are more vaccinated than Europeans, a detailed analysis of
vaccine amounts compared to Alzheimer's risk or early onset of Alzheimer's could
be conducted. However, if the government is behind this study they will use
statistical techniques that water down the results so that risk disappears, the
favorite strategy employed when any drug or medicine has potential risks that
would cause people not to take them.
Stopping Problems Early
Regardless of factors that set the stage for Alzheimer's it is quite clear
that an overall strategy that balances your inflammation checkbook is central to
preventing the problem. On one side of the equation is the wear and tear in your
life. On the other side are the healthy things you do to rejuvenate and recover.
No matter what you believe in, you'd better figure out a way to balance this
checkbook.
We definitely know that it takes many years of wear and tear for full
blown Alzheimer's to manifest. It is vital to act aggressively to prevent the
problem if you are sliding down the Alzheimer's slope. Managing inflammatory
stressors is at the top of your list. It is easiest to make changes in your
brain before the problem gets large. Various memory glitches are normal and
others are not. The Alzheimer's Association does have a list of the ten warning
signs that is helpful:
1. Memory loss. Forgetting recently learned information is one of the most
common early signs of dementia. A person begins to forget more often and is
unable to recall the information later. What's normal? Forgetting names or
appointments occasionally.
2. Difficulty performing familiar tasks. People with dementia often find
it hard to plan or complete everyday tasks. Individuals may lose track of the
steps involved in preparing a meal, placing a telephone call or playing a game.
What's normal? Occasionally forgetting why you came into a room or what you
planned to say.
3. Problems with language. People with Alzheimer's disease often forget
simple words or substitute unusual words, making their speech or writing hard to
understand. They may be unable to find the toothbrush, for example, and instead
ask for "that thing for my mouth." What's normal? Sometimes having trouble
finding the right word.
4. Disorientation to time and place. People with Alzheimer's disease can
become lost in their own neighborhood, forget where they are and how they got
there, and not know how to get back home. What's normal? Forgetting the day of
the week or where you were going.
5. Poor or decreased judgment. Those with Alzheimer's may dress
inappropriately, wearing several layers on a warm day or little clothing in the
cold. They may show poor judgment, like giving away large sums of money to
telemarketers. What's normal? Making a questionable or debatable decision from
time to time.
6. Problems with abstract thinking. Someone with Alzheimer's disease may
have unusual difficulty performing complex mental tasks, like forgetting what
numbers are for and how they should be used. What's normal? Finding it
challenging to balance a checkbook.
7. Misplacing things. A person with Alzheimer's disease may put things in
unusual places: an iron in the freezer or a wristwatch in the sugar bowl. What's
normal? Misplacing keys or a wallet temporarily.
8. Changes in mood or behavior. Someone with Alzheimer's disease may show
rapid mood swings - from calm to tears to anger - for no apparent reason. What's
normal? Occasionally feeling sad or moody.
9. Changes in personality. The personalities of people with dementia can
change dramatically. They may become extremely confused, suspicious, fearful or
dependent on a family member. What's normal? People's personalities do change
somewhat with age.
10. Loss of initiative. A person with Alzheimer's disease may become very
passive, sitting in front of the TV for hours, sleeping more than usual or not
wanting to do usual activities. What's normal? Sometimes feeling weary of work
or social obligations.
For a fully referenced version of this article:
http://www.wellnessresources.com/health...
For more health articles by this author:
http://www.wellnessresources.com/health...
About the author: Byron J. Richards, Board-Certified Clinical
Nutritionist, nationally-renowned nutrition expert, and founder of Wellness
Resources is a leader in advocating the value of dietary supplements as a vital
tool to maintain health. He is an outspoken critic of government and Big Pharma
efforts to deny access to natural health products and has written extensively on
the life-shortening and health-damaging failures of the sickness industry.
www.wellnessresources.com
askbyron@wellnessresources.com
http://www.wellnessresources.com/health/articles/are_vaccinations_causing_early_onset_alzheimers_disease/