An independent scientific
panel weighing a possible link between autism and the mercury
preservative in childhood vaccines heard suggestions that the
source of the heavy metal could be fish.
The Institute of
Medicine panel heard the results from more than a dozen studies
on thimerosal, the preservative found in some vaccines. When
it last met in 2001, it decided there was no evidence that vaccines
caused autism but it also noted little research had been done.
"Clearly, there's
far more information addressing this issue," said panel chair
Dr. Marie McCormick, a professor of maternal and child health
at the Harvard School of Public Health.
Autism is a mysterious
disorder whose symptoms range from a lack of social skills to
a profound and crippling inability to relate to others.
Because it is usually
diagnosed during the toddler years when children receive many
of the 18 or so early childhood shots, some advocacy groups
believe vaccines are to blame.
Many parents told
the panel they were anti-thimerosal, not anti-vaccine.
"Its use should
be considered historic," said Lyn Redwood, president of the
advocacy group Safe Minds whose youngest son is autistic. "Why
take the risk when you don't have to?"
Scientists say it
is possible that if it got into the brain, thimerosal could
cause brain damage. Although it is no longer found in childhood
vaccines in the United States, it remains in the influenza vaccine
and in vaccines in other countries.
Several researchers
to recent studies highlighting the harmful levels of mercury
found in fish and the potential brain damage caused by eating
it.
Last week, an international
group of researchers reported in the Journal of Pediatrics that
children can suffer irreparable brain damage if their mothers
eat seafood high in mercury while pregnant.
Dr. Mady Hornig,
a professor at Columbia University, told the panel future studies
should address exposure to mercury through food. "This is a
continued concern ... if we are not going to remove fish from
our diet," she said.
Researcher H. Vasken
Aposhian said studies needed to look at the impact of a mother's
mercury levels on her children.
"That mercury load
is transferred to some extent... to the child," said Aposhian,
a toxicologist and biology professor at the University of Arizona.
But Amy Carson,
co-founder of Moms Against Mercury, said the government and
others were trying to "shift the blame" from thimerosal to other
sources.
"I think they want
to be able to say those children were already damaged in utero
and that it didn't have anything to do with vaccines," said
Carson, whose 7-year-old son has autism.
Reference
Source 89
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