Regressive Autism, Ileal-Lymphoid Nodular Hyperplasia and Measles Virus by David Thrower

 

Autism and Autism Increases

The Link Between Autism and a Novel Form of Inflammatory Bowel Disease

The Link Between Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Measles Virus

The Link Between Measles Virus and Vaccination with MMR

References

 

 

Autism and Autism Increases

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The above evidence offers confirmation that autism, a historically relatively rare condition, is now found at a greatly-increased rate amongst US and UK children, and that there has been a real increase. Increased numbers are not down to greater awareness, re-classification, altered criteria, past misdiagnosis or better recognition.

 

The Link Between Autism and a Novel Form of Inflammatory Bowel Disease

 

There is now ample evidence, confirmed by independent groups of researchers, of a link between regressive autism and a novel form of inflammatory bowel disease.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Taken together, the above now provide very convincing evidence from a number of wholly-independent groups of researchers of a link between the novel inflammatory bowel disease of ileal lymphoid nodular hyperplasia and regressive autism.

 

The Link Between Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Measles Virus

 

These autism/inflammatory bowel disease findings were followed by findings that linked the novel form of inflammatory bowel disease with persistent measles virus in the gut of affected children:

 

 

 

 

 

Taken with the present study by Walker, Hepner et al, this provides significant evidence for a link between measles virus and ileal lymphoid nodular hyperplasia, with the latter’s already-demonstrated onward link with regressive autism.

 

The Link Between Measles Virus and Vaccination with MMR

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

References

 

(on autism)

 

(1) Wakefield et al, Inflammatory Bowel Disease Study Group, Royal Free Hospital, London, Ileal Lymphoid Nodular Hyperplasia, Non-Specific Colitis and Pervasive Developmental Disorder in Children, Lancet, 28th February 1998

 

(2) Jyonouchi, Sun and Le, Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota, Pro-inflammatory and Regulatory Cytokine Production Associated with Innate and Adaptive Immune Responses in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders and Developmental Regression, Journal of Neuroimmunology, 120 (2001) 170-179

 

(3) Blaxill, The Rising Incidence of Autism, Associations with Thimerosal, presented to the US Institute of Medicine, July 2001

 

(4) Statement by Dr. Jose Cordero on behalf of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, based on CDC data on 24,673 children, 4th May 2006, source Reuters

 

(5) Interview with ABC News, 4th May

 

(6) Source: The Scottish Executive, Edinburgh.

 

(7) Study by Byrd et al, MIND Institute, University of California at Davis, The Epidemiology of Autism in California, October 2002

 

(8) Yeargin-Allsopp, Rice et al, Prevalence of Autism in a US Metropolitan Area, Journal of the American Medical Association, 2003, Jan 1st, 289: (1): pp49-55.

 

(9) Gurney, Fritz et al, Analysis of Prevalence Trends of Autism Spectrum Disorder in Minnesota, Archives of Pediatric Adolescent Medicine, 2003, 157: pp622-627

 

(10) Yazbak, Autism in the United States – A Perspective, Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Vol 8, No. 4, Winter 2003

 

(11) Blaxill, What’s Going On? – The Question of Time Trends in Autism, Public Health Reports, Nov-Dec 2004, Vol 119, pp536-551

 

(12) Newschaffer, Falb et al, Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, and Divisions of Epidemiology and Clinical Research, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, National Autism Prevalence Trends from United States Special Education Data, Pediatrics, Vol 115 No. 3 March 2005 pp277-282

 

(on the link between autism and a novel form of inflammatory bowel disease)

 

(13) (as per reference (1)) Wakefield et al, Inflammatory Bowel Disease Study Group, Royal Free Hospital London, Ileal Lymphoid Nodular Hyperplasia, Non Specific Colitis and Pervasive Development Disorder in Children, Lancet, 28th February 1998

 

 (14) Horvath, Papadimitiou et al, Department of Pediatrics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Gastrointestinal Abnormalities in Children With Autistic Disorder, Journal of Pediatrics, 1999 November, Vol 135 (5), pp559-563

 

(15) Wakefield, Anthony et al, Enterocolitis in Children with Developmental Disorders, American Journal of Gastroenterology, Sept 2000, Vol 95, No. 9, pp2285-2295

 

(16) Furlano, Anthony et al, Colonic CD8 and T-Cell Infiltration With Epithelial Damage in Children with Autism, Journal of Pediatrics, 2001; 138; No. 3, 366-372

 

(17) Paper by Dr. Timothy Buie, Harvard Massachusetts General Hospital, presented to the Oasis 2001 Conference for Autism, Portland, Oregon, November 2001.

 

(18) Wakefield, Anthony, Montgomery et al, Inflammatory Bowel disease Study Group, Royal Free Hospital, University College Medical School, London, and Coombe Women’s Hospital and Trinity College Dublin, The Concept of Enterocolonic Encepalopathy, Autism and Opioid Receptor Ligands, Aliment Pharmacological Ther, 16: pp663-674.

 

(19) Presentation by Krigsman to the US Congressional Committee on Government Reform’s June 2002 hearing, The Status of Research into Vaccine Safety and Autism, held in Washington DC.

 

(20) Ashwood, Murch et al, Royal Free Hospital, London, Intestinal Lymphocyte Populations in Children with Regressive Autism: Evidence for Extensive Mucosal Immunopathology, Journal of Clinical Immunology, Vol 23 No. 6 Nov 2003 pp504-517.

 

(21) Torrente, Anthony et al, Centre for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Royal Free Hospital and University College Medical School, London, Focal-Enhanced Gastritis in Regressive Autism, With Features Distinct from Crohn’s and Helicobacter Pylori Gastritis, American Journal of Gastroenterology, Vol 99, Issue 4, p598, April 2004

 

(22) Ashwood, Anthony et al, Spontaneous Mucosal Lymphocyte Cytokine Profiles in Children with Autism and Gastrointestinal Symptoms: Mucosal Immune Activation and Reduced Counter-Regulatory Interleukin-10, Journal of Clinical Immunology, Vol 24, No. 6, November 2004.

 

(23) Jyonouchi, Geng et al, Department of Pediatrics, New Jersey Medical School, Dysregulated Innate Immune Responses in Young Children with Autistic Spectrum Disorders  -  Their Relationship in Gastrointestinal Symptoms and Dietary Intervention, Neuropsychobiology, February 2005, 51 (2) pp77-85.

 

(24) Letter by Balzola, Barbon et al, Department of Gastroenterology, Department of Neuropsychiatry for Children, Department of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Department of Biomedical Sciences and Human Oncology, University of Turin, Pan-Enteric IBD-Like Disease in a Patient with Regressive Autism Shown for the First Time by the Wireless Capsule Enteroscopy  -  Another Piece in the Jigsaw of this Gut/Brain Syndrome?, American Journal of Gastroenterology, 2005; 100 (4) p979

 

(25) Balzola, Daniela et al, Department of Gastroenterology, Department of Neuropsychiatry for Children, Department of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Department of Biomedical Science and Human Oncology, University of Turin, Autistic Enterocolitis  -  Autistic Enterocolitis: Confirmation of a New Inflammatory Bowel Disease in an Italian Cohort of Patients, paper presented to the American Gastroenterological Association, May 2005 and published in Gastroenterology 2005: 128 Suppl 2, A-303.

 

(26) Wakefield, Ashwood et al, The Significance of Ileo-Colonic Lymphoid Nodular Hyperplasia in Children with Autistic Spectrum Disorder, European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 2005, Vol 17 No. 8.

 

(27) Gonzalez, Lopez et al, Endoscopic and Histological Characteristics of the Digestive Mucosa in Autistic Children with Gastrointestinal Symptoms: Preliminary Report, G.E.N. Suplemento Especial de Pediatria, no. 1, 2005; pp41-47

 

 (on the link between inflammatory bowel disease and measles virus)

 

(28) Uhlmann, Sheils et al, Department of Pathology, Coombe Women’s Hospital Dublin, Trinity College Dublin and Royal Free Hospital London, Measles Virus in Reactive Lympho-Nodular Hyperplasia and Ileo-colitis of Children

 

 (29) Paper presented by Dr. Vijendra Singh, University of Michigan College of Pharmacy, to the US House of Representatives Committee on Government Reform, Washington DC, 2000

 

 (30) Paper presented by Professor John O’Leary, Dublin Women’s Hospital, to the US House of Representatives Committee on Government Reform, Washington DC, April 2000

 

(31) Paper By Uhlmann, Wakefield, O’Leary et al, Potential Viral Pathogenic Mechanism For New Variant Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Journal of Clinical Pathology, Molecular Pathology, 2002, 55, 0-6, published 6th February 2002

 

(32) Paper by Singh, Department of Biology Center for Integrated Biosystems, Utah State University, Logan, Autism, Vaccines and Immune Reactions, presented to the Institute of Medicine, Washington DC, February 2004

 

(on the link between measles virus and vaccination with MMR)

 

(33) Paper presented by O’Leary, Coombe Women’s Hospital and Trinity College Dublin to the Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland, July 2002

 

(34) Kawashima, Takayuki et al, Detection and Sequencing of Measles Virus from Peripheral Mononuclear Cells from Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Autism, Digestive Diseases & Science, Vol 45, No. 4, April 2000, pp723-729

 

(35) Singh, Nelson, Jensen and Bradstreet, Abnormal Measles Serology and Autoimmunity in Autistic Children, Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 109 (1) S232, January 2002, and also presented to the 102nd General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Salt Lake City, Utah, May 2002

 

(36) Bitnun et al, Measles Inclusion-Body Encephalitis Caused by the Vaccine Strain of Measles Virus, Clinical Infectious Diseases Journal, 1999, 29 855-61 (October)

 

(37) Bradstreet, O’Leary, Sheils et al, Detection of Measles Virus Genomic RNA in Cerebrospinal Fluid in Children with Regressive Autism by TaqMan RT-PCR: A Report of Three Cases, summarized at the Institute of Medicine, February 2004 and subsequently published as Bradstreet, Dahr et al, Detection of Measles Virus Genomic RNA in Cerebrospinal Fluid of Children with Regressive Autism: A Report of Three Cases, Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Vol 9, No. 2 Summer 2004

 

(38) Wakefield, Stott and Limb, Gastrointestinal Comorbidity, Autistic Regression and Measles-Containing Vaccines; Positive Re-challenge and Biological Gradient, Medical Veritas 3 (2006) 796-802