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SIDS and Seizures

by L. Coulter, PhD

" Crib death " was so infrequent in the pre-vaccination era that it was not

even mentioned in the statistics, but it started to climb in

the 1950s with the spread of mass vaccination against diseases of

childhood. It became a matter of public and professional

concern and even acquired a new name, " sudden infant death of unknown

origin,. " or, for short, SIDS. This name is significant,

in the light of subsequent controversies, since " of unknown origin " means

exactly that. So, when the medical establishment

assures us that SIDS is unrelated to vaccinations, the obvious response

is, How do you know?, if it is defined as " of unknown

origin " ? At this (as with most common-sense questions about vaccinations)

the medical establishment prefers to retire from the

debate in dignified silence.

So we have witnessed a steady rise in the incidence of SIDS, closely

following the growth in childhood vaccinations. But

information on the progress of this epidemic has been radically suppressed

in the official literature. Whereas in earlier decades -

up to the end of the 1950s - the medical establishment could recognize the

fact of death after vaccination, more recently, as the

official position has hardened, the earlier concessions have been

withdrawn, and vaccinations of all kinds are now declared

absolutely safe at all times and in all places. This has required some

fancy footwork with the epidemiologic statistics, as we will

see below. And since no physician or scientist with a normal IQ could

really believe this " epidemiology, " one is forced to

conclude that the medical establishment, in its wisdom, has decided that

7000-8000 cases of crib death every year are a

reasonable price to pay for a nice steady flow of vaccines with all their

concomitant benefits for the public health (except, of

course, for these same 7000-8000 babies each year who have already enjoyed

all the possible advantages of childhood

vaccines).

After all, they say to themselves, you can't make an omelette without

breaking eggs. But the eggs being broken are small,

helpless, and innocent babies, while the omelette is being enjoyed by the

pediatricians and vaccine manufacturers. Death after

whooping-cough vaccination was first described by a Danish physician in

1933. Two Americans in 1946 described the deaths

of identical twins within 24 hours of a DPT shot (on the background and

history of SIDS see H. Coulter and B. Fisher, DPT: A

Shot in the Dark). E. M. and J. L. Emery in 1982 wrote: " we cannot

exclude the possibility of recent immunisation

being one of several contributory factors in an occasional unexpected

infant death. " But the early 1980s were a turning-point in

the official line. In that same year of 1982 matters came to a crisis when

C. Torch, M.D., Director of Child Neurology,

Department of Pediatrics, University of Nevada School of Medicine, at the

34th Annual Meeting of the American Academy of

Pediatrics, presented a study linking the DPT shot with SIDS. Torch

concluded: " These data show that DPT vaccination may

be a generally unrecognized major cause of sudden infant and early

childhood death, and that the risks of immunization may

outweigh its potential benefits. A need for reevaluation and possible

modification of current vaccination procedures is indicated

by this study. "

Torch's report provoked an uproar in the American Academy of Pediatrics.

At a hastily arranged press conference he was

soundly chastised for using " anecdotal data, " meaning (will you believe

it?) that he actually interviewed the families concerned!

This mistake was not made again. Gerald M. Fenichel, MD, chairman of the

Department of Neurology at Vanderbilt University

Medical Center, in 1983 published an article on vaccinations entitled " the

danger of case reports, " and the pro-vaccination

literature produced in profusion in later years and decades has generally

steered away from and around any such thing as a

" case report. " These researchers will examine with minute precision

hospital card files, medicare cover sheets, even physicians'

records, but God preserve us from contact with the children themselves or

their families! Another sign of the hardening official

position was a two-part article by , M.D., in a 1982 issue

of the New England Journal of Medicine.

was Director of the Pediatric Pulmonary Unit at the Massachusetts General

Hospital and a " principal investigator " of SIDS.

His article on the causes of SIDS (financed by the U.S. Public Health

Service) never mentioned vaccination even though, at a

1979 FDA meeting on " The Relation between DPT Vaccines and Sudden Infant

Death Syndrome, " had described

200 infants with severe breathing difficulties after a DPT shot, such that

they required resuscitation. In 1979 he had said: " We

do have all this data. It is all recorded on tabular sheets, and we have

it on nearly 200 infants that we have evaluated this way. It

is in a capacity that it can be pulled, " but in 1982 he preferred not to

" pull " this information after all. When Barbara Fisher and I

queried him on this in a 1982 letter, he replied: " I did not mention DPT

shots in my review article on SIDS in the New England

Journal of Medicine because there are no data collected in a scientific

way [no anecdotal data, if you please!] that support an

association. This includes Dr. Torch's report. "

So the cat was let out of the bag by Dr. Torch, who has been effectively

silenced by his colleagues since that memorable date.

In his editorial attacking " case reports " as a basis for evaluating

vaccine damage, Gerald Fenichel alluded to an ongoing study by

the NIH on " risk factors " in sudden infant death syndrome which, Fenichel

asserted, " excluded DPT as a causal factor in sudden

infant death syndrome. " Let us take a look at this study, published some

years later as " Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis

Immunization and Sudden Infant Death: Results of the National Institute of

Child Health and Human Development ative

Epidemiological Study of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Risk Factors, "

coauthored by: J. Hoffman, Jehu Hunter,

Karla Damus, Pakter, R. , Gerald van Belle, and Eileen

G. Hasselmeyer (Pediatrics 79:4 [April, 1987],

598-611.

This " retrospective case-controlled study " involved finding 838 children

whose deaths had been classified as SIDS by the

attending physician and/or the coroner and comparing them with 1514

" controls. " The 800 " cases " were selected from among

all children who died with a diagnosis of SIDS between October, 1978, and

December, 1979, at or near certain designated

centers. Excluded from the group were: (1) those on whom an autopsy was

not performed or was performed with deviations

from the standard protocol, (2) Those younger than 14 days or older than

24 months, (3) those who died after more than 24

hours in a hospital, and (4) those for whom the parents refused permission

to perform an autopsy. The selection was made by a

panel or panels of pathologists who examined the records of the children's

deaths and autopsies and who decided whether or

not the child had really died of SIDS or from some other cause.

There are two major objections to this procedure. The first is that the

" case " group contained some children who were

vaccinated and some who were not. The second is that we are not given the

criteria by which the panel of pathologists decided

whether or not to include a child as one of the " cases. " On the first

objection, the investigators are searching for a tie with

vaccination in a group of 800+ infants, some vaccinated and others not.

This is contrary to common sense. Why water down

the sample with babies who were never vaccinated? At this point the whole

methodology for determining whether a previous

vaccination may or may not have contributed to the SIDS death in question

rapidly becomes incoherent. This leads to objection

#2, which is that we are not given the criteria according to which

children were accepted as " cases " by the panel of pathologists,

and we cannot judge whether or not this was done correctly.

A typical SIDS post-vaccination case would be the baby with a slight

bacterial or viral infection who is vaccinated and then dies

of the infection. These cases are invariably classified by attending

physicians and coroners as " death from an infection " without

taking into account the fact that vaccinations are known to lower

resistance momentarily (for a day or two). In this state of

lowered immunity the baby might well die from the infection which would

otherwise have been innocuous. So such a case would

not even be classified as SIDS (since the infectious " cause " is known),

and certainly not as " SIDS after a vaccination, " even

though the baby would not have died in the absence of a vaccination. How

many such cases were rejected by the " panel of

pathologists " ? We are not told.

The combination of (1) mixing vaccinated and unvaccinated babies with (2)

failure to provide the criteria for acceptance into the

" case " group taints this same " case " group irredeemably and, in itself,

should prevent any further consideration of this study. The

next step in the investigation was to select two live " controls " for each

" case. " Control A was " matched " for age with the

corresponding " case, " meaning that he or she was born as close as possible

to the same day. Control B was " matched " not only

for date of birth but also for birth weight and race. Again, as with the

" cases, " these " controls " were mixed with respect to

vaccination status, some yes and some no. The obvious criticism here is

that date of birth is simply not relevant to whether or

not a baby is vulnerable to the effects of a vaccine (unless the selection

is being made on astrological grounds!). Birth weight and

race are slightly more relevant, since children of low birthweight and

black children (who are more often of low birthweight than

white children) are more likely to be affected adversely by vaccination.

However, sex was not included as a criterion, even though males die of

SIDS, and are adversely affected by vaccinations, five

times more frequently than females. This was a peculiar oversight. The

only comment to be made about this " control " group is

that it was selected on entirely incomprehensible grounds. It stands to

reason that, when one group is being compared with

another group, the two groups must be " matched " with respect to the

variable being studied. In this case the variable being

studied is " tendency to die after receiving a vaccination. " Date of birth

has nothing at all to do with this variable, whereas weight

and race are only marginally related to it. Sex of the baby, which is

related, was not included in the analysis.

Even though these two groups are not comparable, Drs. Hoffman et al.

compared them anyway, finding that " only " 39.8% of

the " cases " had received at least one DPT shot, while 55% of Control A

infants and 53.2% of Control B infants had received at

least one DPT shot. Since fewer " cases " than " controls " had received the

shot, the authors concluded that " DTP immunization is

not a significant [what do they mean by " significant? " ] factor in the

occurrence of SIDS. " This sort of attempted comparison can

only be described as a shambles, a grotesque imitation of scientific

method designed to fool the public (and the journalists who

are supposed to be monitoring precisely this sort of intellectual

dishonesty). It would have made as much sense to interview the

first 1600 people they could pick up in the Greyhound Bus Station and ask

them about their vaccination status.

But this article had its effect. Dr. Torch was effectively silenced, and

for years this pseudo-science has been cited as one of the

medical establishment's principal weapons in its drive to extend childhood

vaccination programs. How do you react when your

own government lies to you systematically about life-and-death questions?

As I have noted earlier, the answer is political action

in the state legislatures, and one weapon in the hands of the public is an

understanding of the pseudo-science and

pseudo-epidemiology represented by articles like this one.

Another article on the SIDS-vaccination relationship, fortunately of far

superior quality, is Larry J. Baraff, J. Ablon, and

C. Weiss, " Possible Temporal Association Between Diphtheria-Tetanus

Toxoid-Pertussis Vaccination and Sudden

Infant Death Syndrome. " (Pediatric Infectious Diseases 2:1 [January,

1983], 7-11). The authors adopted a simpler, intuitively

obvious method of investigation and concluded that there is, indeed, a

" temporal association " between the DPT shot and sudden

infant death. They found that 382 cases of SIDS were recorded in Los

Angeles County between January 1, 1979, and August

23, 1980, and they simply interviewed the parents of 145 of these cases,

either in person or by telephone. They asked: 1) the

baby's sex, 2) the age at death, 3) the last visit to a physician or nurse

prior to death, 4) the date of the last vaccination, 5) the

name and telephone number of the physician or nurse, and 6) the type of

immunization given.

They found a statistically significant excess of deaths in the first day

and the first week after vaccination, i.e., a " temporal

association. " They rejected the use of a " control group, " and instead

relied on the intuitively obvious assumption that " there

should be no temporal association between DPT immunization and SIDS were

there no causal relationship between these two

events. " I have not found any criticism of this article for relying on

" anecdotal evidence. " This study was not financed by the US

Government but apparently by the UCLA School of Medicine and the Los

Angeles County Department of Health Services.

Another respectable study of the SIDS-vaccination connection is

" Diptheria-Tetanus-Pertussis Immunization and Sudden Infant

Death Syndrome " by M. , Hershel Jick, R. Perera,

S. , and A. Knauss,

published in the American Journal of Public Health 77:8 [August, 1987],

945-951.

This study supports a link between the DPT shot and " sudden infant death

syndrome. " The authors examined the records of all

children born in the Group Health ative of Puget Sound between 1972

and 1983 to see how many had died of SIDS.

Total births recorded during this period were 35,581, but of them only

26,500 were eligible for the study. Not all deaths of

infants during this period were considered to be SIDS. " All deaths which

on the basis of death certificate diagnosis, hospital

discharge data, and pharmacy use taken together could be clearly ascribed

to causes not related to immunization were

excluded. " Ultimately, " SIDS was defined as any death for which no cause

could be discerned among infants of normal

birthweight and without predisposing medical conditions. " But, despite

these exclusions and restrictions, the authors found " the

SIDS mortality rate in the period 0-3 days following a DPT shot to be 7.3

times that in the period beginning 30 days after

immunization. " They called the results of this study " worrisome " but

consoled themselves with the thought that " only a small

proportion of SIDS cases in infants with birthweights greater than 2500

grams could be associated with DPT. " A particular

criticism to be made of this study is that children with " predisposing

medical conditions " were excluded and their deaths were

not considered to be SIDS, whereas in actuality children with

" predisposing medical conditions " are routinely vaccinated.

Another study by the same group, of " neurologic events " following

vaccination, is slightly more ambiguous than the preceding

one but nonetheless raises a red flag about vaccines. M. ,

Hershel Jick, R. Perera, A. Knauss,

and S. . " Neurologic Events Following

Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis Immunization. " (Pediatrics 81:3 [March,

1988], 345-349) was an investigation of the same 35,581 children, born

between 1972 and 1983, as in the previous study. The

attempt was made to identify " new neurologic conditions " in this group,

not by interviewing the families, as might have been

expected, but by examining hospitalization records and prescription

records for the drugs typically used to treat seizures. Since

the pharmacy was " on line " only on July 1, 1976, any drug purchases made

prior to that date by families who left the Group

Health ative before July 1, 1976, would have been missed, as well as

" any child neither hospitalized not treated with

drug therapy. "

Also excluded from the study were children with " uncomplicated first

febrile seizures, " because these " are not likely to have

been hospitalized or treated with drugs. " Also excluded from the study

were children whose first seizure occurred prior to 30

days of age - presumably because no vaccinations were given in the first

30 days of life (although this is not stated). Also

excluded from the study were children in the category " seizure with

possible predisposing cause, " such as " trauma, asphyxia,

congenital malformation, disorders of metabolism, birth weight less than

2500g, central nervous system infection, and neonatal

sepsis. " Also excluded were children for whom it was not possible to

identify from the available records a clear date of onset of

illness.

Ultimately, the group was reduced by 25% - to 26,600. Of course, when

studies such as this exclude whole categories of

children - presumably those who are particularly vulnerable to vaccine

damage - the question immediately arises whether the

study is truly a representative sample, since in the " real world " all of

the above excluded categories are routinely vaccinated.

And if the sample is not " representative, " the study itself has no

predictive value. The authors found 239 seizures without an

apparent predisposing cause among the children in the target population.

One case, in particular, is worth describing: " The single

seizure that occurred within three days of a DPT was in an 11-month old

white girl who suffered a 2 ½ hour generalized

tonic-clonic seizure on the evening of her third DPT-oral poliovirus

vaccination. Her temperature during the seizure was 39

degrees C. (102.2 degrees F.). Results of CSF studies were normal. There

was a transient left hemiparesis and right sixth nerve

paresis. She was treated with phenobarbitol. At 6 years of age, while

still taking phenobarbitol, she was experiencing rare focal

left-sided seizures in the absence of fever and continued to have abnormal

EEG tracings. " However, this and the other 238

cases were explained away by the authors as part of the " expected

incidence " of seizures in this population, a " background "

incidence, as it were.

If a " background incidence " is stipulated, one would assume that it had

been ascertained in a non-vaccinated population.

Instead, somewhat surprisingly, the " background incidence " is defined as

the incidence in the vaccinated population later than 30

days after a vaccination. The assumption seems to be that any seizure

provoked by a vaccination will necessarily occur within

the first 30 days after a vaccination; those occurring later than 30 days

post-vaccination are thought to be God-given, a part of

Nature, as it were. However, there is no evidence for this. No study of

natural seizure incidence, or natural crib-death

incidence, in an unvaccinated group of Americans has ever been performed,

as far can be determined. Mass vaccination began

in the late 1940s, and the medical establishment became concerned about

vaccine damage only in the 1970s. Thus they were

vaccinating children for over thirty years before they got interested in

statistical comparisons; today it is difficult or impossible to

locate a group of unvaccinated children sufficiently large to have any

statistical value.

Also there seems to be the feeling that not vaccinating a child is

" unethical, " and that medical research should not venture into

" unethical " areas. If that is how they feel, well and good, but they then

should not discourse glibly about the " background

incidence " of this or that disease or neurologic condition. These sorts of

unfounded assertions about the " natural " or

" background " incidence of seizures or other kinds of vaccine reactions

bedevil nearly every study of this subject. Another trick

used by the medical establishment to manipulate public opinion is to cite

some study as supporting its arguments when, in

actuality, the study came up with contrary conclusions. Sometimes one

finds a conflict within the article itself - for instance, the

summary or the abstract will make claims which are not supported in the

body of the article. Both of these criticisms can be

levelled at: W. Shields, Claus Nielsen, Dorte Buch, Vibeke

sen, Christenson, Bengt Zachau-Christiansen,

and D. Cherry. " Relationship of Pertussis Immunization to the Onset

of Neurologic Disorders: a Retrospective

Epidemiologic Study. " J. Pediatrics 1988; 113, 801-805.

This, conducted in Denmark, was of two groups of children who received

pertussis and other immunizations at different ages, to

see if this affected the dates of onset of neurological conditions. Before

April, 1970, Danish children got the DPT shot (together

with the Salk polio vaccine) at 5, 6, 7, and 15 months of age. After this

date children received the monovalent pertussis vaccine

at 5 weeks, 9 weeks, and 10 months of age, and the diphtheria, tetanus,

and Salk polio vaccines at 5 months, 6 months, and 15

months. At the time of the change the potency of the pertussis vaccine was

reduced by 20%, and the aluminum adjuvant (a

frequent cause of reactions) was removed.

This study compared 82,518 births in the 1967-1968 period with 73,390 in

the 1972-1973 period. Records of all hospital

admissions for seizure disorders and related conditions were examined and

" patients whose cases were appropriate for the

study were entered into the computer data base. " This is the first

criticism to be made: the authors do not give further

information on the criteria of inclusion. The authors found that the

incidence of neurological diseases increased with the new

vaccine schedule: epilepsy went from 0.35% (286 cases) to 0.37% (268

cases); febrile convulsions went from 1.01% (830

cases) to 1.87% (1369 cases), and central nervous system infections rose

from 0.16% (136 cases) to 0.29% (214 cases).

This could not have been a very welcome finding, and it had to be

explained away somehow. Take CNS infections, which

almost doubled. The authors write: " there was no relationship between the

time of the scheduled administration of pertussis

vaccine " and these infections, whereas the accompanying table shows that

there was a relationship. They then state that it

" appeared to represent a change in the referral pattern " but gave no

further details. Furthermore, in the " Discussion " section at

the end, the authors went from " appeared to represent " to " was due to " :

" for CNS infections the change in rate was due to a

change in referral patterns. " This appears to be simple prevarication. The

same occurred with respect to epilepsy. The authors

write: " there was no relationship between the age of onset of epilepsy and

the scheduled age of administration of pertussis

vaccine, " whereas the table on the very same page shows that there was

such a relationship.

With respect to febrile seizures, they admitted a statistical correlation

between the occurrence of first febrile seizures and the

scheduled date of pertussis vaccination (p = 0.004). This occurred at the

time of the third shot in the 1967-1968 cohort and the

fourth shot in the 1972-1973 cohort. They note: " Thus at each period after

the usual age of onset of febrile seizures, there was a

significant increase in the incidence of febrile seizures in the group

receiving pertussis immunization ... 5.9% of all children who

developed a first febrile seizure between 28 days and 24 months of age had

it as a consequence of fever caused by pertussis

immunization. " Then they soften the impact of this finding by claiming:

" the majority of convulsions that occur within a few days

of pertussis immunization are febrile seizures and therefore are only

rarely associated with long-term seizure disorders. " What

does " only rarely " mean? This study has, of course, been cited numerous

times in the subsequent literature in support of the total

innocuousness of the pertussis vaccine.

Return to the Top

Copyright 1996 by L. Coulter, Center For Empirical Medicine, 4221

45th Street NW, Washington, DC 20016, United

States. Phone: 1-202-364-0898. Fax: 1-202-362-3407. Email:

hlcoulter@.... URL:

http://home.earthlink.net/~emptherapies

Reproduction and dissemination of this article is encouraged but written

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