Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 Dear , I have been told that you have to be off IVIG for more then a few months to get an accurate reading for titers to the pneummovax...5 months to be exact. I thought I would share this with you just in case it could be correct. I would be interested to hear what everyone else has heard on this topic. Autumn mom to Mark Cd5-Cd19 PID/ Samter's syndrome, A1A, GERD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 Dear , I have been told that you have to be off IVIG for more then a few months to get an accurate reading for titers to the pneummovax...5 months to be exact. I thought I would share this with you just in case it could be correct. I would be interested to hear what everyone else has heard on this topic. Autumn mom to Mark Cd5-Cd19 PID/ Samter's syndrome, A1A, GERD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 Dear , I have been told that you have to be off IVIG for more then a few months to get an accurate reading for titers to the pneummovax...5 months to be exact. I thought I would share this with you just in case it could be correct. I would be interested to hear what everyone else has heard on this topic. Autumn mom to Mark Cd5-Cd19 PID/ Samter's syndrome, A1A, GERD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 , Thanks for asking for the clarification, because I didn't explain this part well the first time around. The way I understand it is that if someone has normal T-cell function, they should be able to respond to vaccines and make memory T-cells. These T-memory cells are stored in the body after an illness or exposure, and you only need one of them in order to really boost your response to an infection. But you need an immunization or a significant enough exposure to get the immune system revved up to make the response that will produce a T-memory cell for that specific illness. That one little cell can mean the difference between responding in three weeks or three days to an infection. But - like in your case - most of the time, when they check for memory to infection, they look at the IgG levels, and IgG is produced by the B cells (when a B cell is activated against a germ, it differentiates into a plasma cell, which produces IgM or IgG or IgA against the germ). I am really not sure that in general testing (that is, outside of an obscure lab in some famous researcher's academic institution) there is a way to look for specific memory T-cells - I don't think they can tell the difference between them just by looking... so the way they test for T-cell memory is to do the Antigen Proliferation Tests (that's when you test a person's T-cells with Diphtheria, Tetanus, and Candida in a test tube... it's different than the pre and post-titers they draw after a vaccine - those are usually IgM and/or IgG levels). But anyway, even if your T-cells work perfectly, if your B-cells do not, you may have low IgG in general, and low IgG toward specific illnesses. So 's results on the tests could simply indicate his B-cell problem. To take an extreme example which might help clarify, if you look in the blood of someone with Bruton's (X-linked Agammaglobulinemia, congenital absence of B-cells), you will find that they have no IgG (or very little) against Diphtheria, Tetanus, etc., after they received their vaccination. That looks pretty scary on paper, but it doesn't necessarily mean that they have no protection against those illnesses, because in Bruton's patients, their T-cells function normally (this may be part of the reason that Bruton's patients tend to respond very well to IVIG, whereas many CVID patients - who often have a normal number of B-cells present - continue to have ongoing infections after IVIG starts. It's because CVID patients frequently have T-cell functional problems which cannot be ameliorated by IVIG). Presumably, Bruton's patients have memory for these illnesses - it's just stored in the T-cells, so you can't detect it by the IgG tests. My understanding is that if you took their T-cells and put them in a test tube and threw in some Tetanus antigen, their T-cells would proliferate normally. Doctors use the IgG levels against Diphtheria and Tetanus as a way to look at whether the patient's B cells are working to churn out the IgG. It's part of the basic workup for an immune deficiency. But the ultimate proof of whether someone has protection against an illness lies in the T-cell proliferation tests (except for those few illnesses - H. flu, Pneumococcus, Meningococcus - which require an all-B cells response). So if you want to make sure is protected, antigen proliferation tests are probably the way to go. But I think that if your doctors are willing to fight for to get extra vaccinations to try to keep his IgG titers in the protective range, it wouldn't hurt and could certainly help. As an aside, many people with CVID have low antigen proliferation responses on the T-cell stimulation tests. Most people with CVID have normal mitogen responses (they can proliferate in response to *general* stimulants - ConA, Pokeweed, etc), but for whatever reason, their *specific* responses are decreased. It doesn't happen to everyone, and I think that's one of the many variable symptoms that will someday help distinguish between some of the many different illnesses CVID really is. No one really knows why this low antigen response happens. Lots of speculation, but chances are it has something to do with the B and T cells' interaction process being messed up somewhere along the way. But that's part of why I think people need more immunizations rather than less... going by just IgG levels alone may not tell you if you have specific protection against particular illnesses, so I would maximize my chances of producing protective amounts of IgG and more significantly, of producing the T-memory cells which are crucial to swift and specific immune response by making sure I kept up my immunizations and by doing them more often, if needed. The main thing I wanted to get across in my original message, though, was just that saying because someone has an immune deficiency, they shouldn't get their (safe, killed) immunizations, is adding insult to injury. Obviously you got the take-home message! I hope I didn't scare you... and I hope this explanation helps a bit. Let me know if there's anything else I should clarify. Take care, and good luck with convincing the insurance company!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 , Thanks for asking for the clarification, because I didn't explain this part well the first time around. The way I understand it is that if someone has normal T-cell function, they should be able to respond to vaccines and make memory T-cells. These T-memory cells are stored in the body after an illness or exposure, and you only need one of them in order to really boost your response to an infection. But you need an immunization or a significant enough exposure to get the immune system revved up to make the response that will produce a T-memory cell for that specific illness. That one little cell can mean the difference between responding in three weeks or three days to an infection. But - like in your case - most of the time, when they check for memory to infection, they look at the IgG levels, and IgG is produced by the B cells (when a B cell is activated against a germ, it differentiates into a plasma cell, which produces IgM or IgG or IgA against the germ). I am really not sure that in general testing (that is, outside of an obscure lab in some famous researcher's academic institution) there is a way to look for specific memory T-cells - I don't think they can tell the difference between them just by looking... so the way they test for T-cell memory is to do the Antigen Proliferation Tests (that's when you test a person's T-cells with Diphtheria, Tetanus, and Candida in a test tube... it's different than the pre and post-titers they draw after a vaccine - those are usually IgM and/or IgG levels). But anyway, even if your T-cells work perfectly, if your B-cells do not, you may have low IgG in general, and low IgG toward specific illnesses. So 's results on the tests could simply indicate his B-cell problem. To take an extreme example which might help clarify, if you look in the blood of someone with Bruton's (X-linked Agammaglobulinemia, congenital absence of B-cells), you will find that they have no IgG (or very little) against Diphtheria, Tetanus, etc., after they received their vaccination. That looks pretty scary on paper, but it doesn't necessarily mean that they have no protection against those illnesses, because in Bruton's patients, their T-cells function normally (this may be part of the reason that Bruton's patients tend to respond very well to IVIG, whereas many CVID patients - who often have a normal number of B-cells present - continue to have ongoing infections after IVIG starts. It's because CVID patients frequently have T-cell functional problems which cannot be ameliorated by IVIG). Presumably, Bruton's patients have memory for these illnesses - it's just stored in the T-cells, so you can't detect it by the IgG tests. My understanding is that if you took their T-cells and put them in a test tube and threw in some Tetanus antigen, their T-cells would proliferate normally. Doctors use the IgG levels against Diphtheria and Tetanus as a way to look at whether the patient's B cells are working to churn out the IgG. It's part of the basic workup for an immune deficiency. But the ultimate proof of whether someone has protection against an illness lies in the T-cell proliferation tests (except for those few illnesses - H. flu, Pneumococcus, Meningococcus - which require an all-B cells response). So if you want to make sure is protected, antigen proliferation tests are probably the way to go. But I think that if your doctors are willing to fight for to get extra vaccinations to try to keep his IgG titers in the protective range, it wouldn't hurt and could certainly help. As an aside, many people with CVID have low antigen proliferation responses on the T-cell stimulation tests. Most people with CVID have normal mitogen responses (they can proliferate in response to *general* stimulants - ConA, Pokeweed, etc), but for whatever reason, their *specific* responses are decreased. It doesn't happen to everyone, and I think that's one of the many variable symptoms that will someday help distinguish between some of the many different illnesses CVID really is. No one really knows why this low antigen response happens. Lots of speculation, but chances are it has something to do with the B and T cells' interaction process being messed up somewhere along the way. But that's part of why I think people need more immunizations rather than less... going by just IgG levels alone may not tell you if you have specific protection against particular illnesses, so I would maximize my chances of producing protective amounts of IgG and more significantly, of producing the T-memory cells which are crucial to swift and specific immune response by making sure I kept up my immunizations and by doing them more often, if needed. The main thing I wanted to get across in my original message, though, was just that saying because someone has an immune deficiency, they shouldn't get their (safe, killed) immunizations, is adding insult to injury. Obviously you got the take-home message! I hope I didn't scare you... and I hope this explanation helps a bit. Let me know if there's anything else I should clarify. Take care, and good luck with convincing the insurance company!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 , Thanks for asking for the clarification, because I didn't explain this part well the first time around. The way I understand it is that if someone has normal T-cell function, they should be able to respond to vaccines and make memory T-cells. These T-memory cells are stored in the body after an illness or exposure, and you only need one of them in order to really boost your response to an infection. But you need an immunization or a significant enough exposure to get the immune system revved up to make the response that will produce a T-memory cell for that specific illness. That one little cell can mean the difference between responding in three weeks or three days to an infection. But - like in your case - most of the time, when they check for memory to infection, they look at the IgG levels, and IgG is produced by the B cells (when a B cell is activated against a germ, it differentiates into a plasma cell, which produces IgM or IgG or IgA against the germ). I am really not sure that in general testing (that is, outside of an obscure lab in some famous researcher's academic institution) there is a way to look for specific memory T-cells - I don't think they can tell the difference between them just by looking... so the way they test for T-cell memory is to do the Antigen Proliferation Tests (that's when you test a person's T-cells with Diphtheria, Tetanus, and Candida in a test tube... it's different than the pre and post-titers they draw after a vaccine - those are usually IgM and/or IgG levels). But anyway, even if your T-cells work perfectly, if your B-cells do not, you may have low IgG in general, and low IgG toward specific illnesses. So 's results on the tests could simply indicate his B-cell problem. To take an extreme example which might help clarify, if you look in the blood of someone with Bruton's (X-linked Agammaglobulinemia, congenital absence of B-cells), you will find that they have no IgG (or very little) against Diphtheria, Tetanus, etc., after they received their vaccination. That looks pretty scary on paper, but it doesn't necessarily mean that they have no protection against those illnesses, because in Bruton's patients, their T-cells function normally (this may be part of the reason that Bruton's patients tend to respond very well to IVIG, whereas many CVID patients - who often have a normal number of B-cells present - continue to have ongoing infections after IVIG starts. It's because CVID patients frequently have T-cell functional problems which cannot be ameliorated by IVIG). Presumably, Bruton's patients have memory for these illnesses - it's just stored in the T-cells, so you can't detect it by the IgG tests. My understanding is that if you took their T-cells and put them in a test tube and threw in some Tetanus antigen, their T-cells would proliferate normally. Doctors use the IgG levels against Diphtheria and Tetanus as a way to look at whether the patient's B cells are working to churn out the IgG. It's part of the basic workup for an immune deficiency. But the ultimate proof of whether someone has protection against an illness lies in the T-cell proliferation tests (except for those few illnesses - H. flu, Pneumococcus, Meningococcus - which require an all-B cells response). So if you want to make sure is protected, antigen proliferation tests are probably the way to go. But I think that if your doctors are willing to fight for to get extra vaccinations to try to keep his IgG titers in the protective range, it wouldn't hurt and could certainly help. As an aside, many people with CVID have low antigen proliferation responses on the T-cell stimulation tests. Most people with CVID have normal mitogen responses (they can proliferate in response to *general* stimulants - ConA, Pokeweed, etc), but for whatever reason, their *specific* responses are decreased. It doesn't happen to everyone, and I think that's one of the many variable symptoms that will someday help distinguish between some of the many different illnesses CVID really is. No one really knows why this low antigen response happens. Lots of speculation, but chances are it has something to do with the B and T cells' interaction process being messed up somewhere along the way. But that's part of why I think people need more immunizations rather than less... going by just IgG levels alone may not tell you if you have specific protection against particular illnesses, so I would maximize my chances of producing protective amounts of IgG and more significantly, of producing the T-memory cells which are crucial to swift and specific immune response by making sure I kept up my immunizations and by doing them more often, if needed. The main thing I wanted to get across in my original message, though, was just that saying because someone has an immune deficiency, they shouldn't get their (safe, killed) immunizations, is adding insult to injury. Obviously you got the take-home message! I hope I didn't scare you... and I hope this explanation helps a bit. Let me know if there's anything else I should clarify. Take care, and good luck with convincing the insurance company!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 Dear Autumna; Thank you for the shared information on the waiting time for to be off of the IVIG to read accurate titers on Pneumovax We were not told. thanks annette mom cvid asthmatic >From: Autti@... >Reply-To: PedPIDonelist >To: PedPIDonelist >Subject: Re: vaccines >Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 14:54:41 EDT > >From: Autti@... > >Dear , > >I have been told that you have to be off IVIG for more then a few months to >get an accurate reading for titers to the pneummovax...5 months to be >exact. >I thought I would share this with you just in case it could be correct. I >would be interested to hear what everyone else has heard on this topic. > >Autumn mom to Mark Cd5-Cd19 PID/ Samter's syndrome, A1A, GERD > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >With more than 17 million e-mails exchanged daily... >http://www.onelist.com >....ONElist is THE place where the world talks! >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >This forum is open to parents and caregivers of children diagnosed with a >Primary Immune Deficiency. Opinions or medical advice stated here are the >sole responsibility of the poster and should not be taken as professional >advice. _______________________________________________________________ Get Free Email and Do More On The Web. Visit http://www.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 Dear Autumna; Thank you for the shared information on the waiting time for to be off of the IVIG to read accurate titers on Pneumovax We were not told. thanks annette mom cvid asthmatic >From: Autti@... >Reply-To: PedPIDonelist >To: PedPIDonelist >Subject: Re: vaccines >Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 14:54:41 EDT > >From: Autti@... > >Dear , > >I have been told that you have to be off IVIG for more then a few months to >get an accurate reading for titers to the pneummovax...5 months to be >exact. >I thought I would share this with you just in case it could be correct. I >would be interested to hear what everyone else has heard on this topic. > >Autumn mom to Mark Cd5-Cd19 PID/ Samter's syndrome, A1A, GERD > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >With more than 17 million e-mails exchanged daily... >http://www.onelist.com >....ONElist is THE place where the world talks! >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >This forum is open to parents and caregivers of children diagnosed with a >Primary Immune Deficiency. Opinions or medical advice stated here are the >sole responsibility of the poster and should not be taken as professional >advice. _______________________________________________________________ Get Free Email and Do More On The Web. Visit http://www.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 1999 Report Share Posted May 28, 1999 Dear Autumna; Thank you for the shared information on the waiting time for to be off of the IVIG to read accurate titers on Pneumovax We were not told. thanks annette mom cvid asthmatic >From: Autti@... >Reply-To: PedPIDonelist >To: PedPIDonelist >Subject: Re: vaccines >Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 14:54:41 EDT > >From: Autti@... > >Dear , > >I have been told that you have to be off IVIG for more then a few months to >get an accurate reading for titers to the pneummovax...5 months to be >exact. >I thought I would share this with you just in case it could be correct. I >would be interested to hear what everyone else has heard on this topic. > >Autumn mom to Mark Cd5-Cd19 PID/ Samter's syndrome, A1A, GERD > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >With more than 17 million e-mails exchanged daily... >http://www.onelist.com >....ONElist is THE place where the world talks! >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >This forum is open to parents and caregivers of children diagnosed with a >Primary Immune Deficiency. Opinions or medical advice stated here are the >sole responsibility of the poster and should not be taken as professional >advice. _______________________________________________________________ Get Free Email and Do More On The Web. Visit http://www.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 1999 Report Share Posted May 29, 1999 - macey had a low response to tetanus but ok response to diphtheria. and according to her tcell function tests her tcells are ok. go figure. Her pneumovax test results were not what the immunologist wanted to see and so he diagnosed her with Selective antibody deficiency. Selective being that she can respond to some and not to other. Macey had her DT titers done twice. Once at Duke and once in December when she had the pneumovax. both showed one responded, one didn't. Ursula Holleman Macey's mom (4 yr. old with CVID, asthma, GERD, sinus disease, grade I left kidney reflux, Sensory Integration Disorder) ICQ # 28592349 http://www.icq.com PedPID email list archives http://www.netpage.org/PedPID/_PedPID/ PedPID email list introductions http://www.netpage.org/PedPID/_PedPID/introduction.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 1999 Report Share Posted May 29, 1999 - macey had a low response to tetanus but ok response to diphtheria. and according to her tcell function tests her tcells are ok. go figure. Her pneumovax test results were not what the immunologist wanted to see and so he diagnosed her with Selective antibody deficiency. Selective being that she can respond to some and not to other. Macey had her DT titers done twice. Once at Duke and once in December when she had the pneumovax. both showed one responded, one didn't. Ursula Holleman Macey's mom (4 yr. old with CVID, asthma, GERD, sinus disease, grade I left kidney reflux, Sensory Integration Disorder) ICQ # 28592349 http://www.icq.com PedPID email list archives http://www.netpage.org/PedPID/_PedPID/ PedPID email list introductions http://www.netpage.org/PedPID/_PedPID/introduction.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 1999 Report Share Posted May 29, 1999 - macey had a low response to tetanus but ok response to diphtheria. and according to her tcell function tests her tcells are ok. go figure. Her pneumovax test results were not what the immunologist wanted to see and so he diagnosed her with Selective antibody deficiency. Selective being that she can respond to some and not to other. Macey had her DT titers done twice. Once at Duke and once in December when she had the pneumovax. both showed one responded, one didn't. Ursula Holleman Macey's mom (4 yr. old with CVID, asthma, GERD, sinus disease, grade I left kidney reflux, Sensory Integration Disorder) ICQ # 28592349 http://www.icq.com PedPID email list archives http://www.netpage.org/PedPID/_PedPID/ PedPID email list introductions http://www.netpage.org/PedPID/_PedPID/introduction.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 I think that some children are neurologically sensitive, and being exposed to environmental triggers that would be inconsequential for the average child, could create a severe reaction in a sensitive child. How else to explain why some children have much worse reactions to vaccinations than others? Physicians will advise not to vaccinate in such a case (if there have been seizures, prolonged high fever, inconsolable crying, floppiness etc) even without any direct evidence of the cause and effect relationship-they just have a suspicion that there is such a relationship and thus advise caution. That is the same suspicion and caution that parents with seemingly neurologically sensitive children excercise with regard to vaccines. Just b/c no direct cause/effect relationship has been demonstrated, does not mean that suspicions about such a relationship are totally unfounded. We cannot easily prevent our children's exposures to things like viruses (like the strep virus that can possibly trigger autoimmune reaction and then OCD) or allergens, that for some children trigger asthma, or can trigger severe food allergies etc. But we can control their exposure to vaccinations that, in a vulnerable child, could possibly create an autoimmune response, or high fever, or even seizure and CNS effects, maybe brain effects. Since no one knows yet what DOES cause autism and it's spectrums (and other neurological/brain disorders like OCD) I believe they cannot yet definitively say what DOES NOT cause it either. I.e they cannot definitively say that vaccines are NOT a possible cause. Tell me what DOES cause neurological disorders like autism, that is not vaccine related, and then I will dismiss concern about vaccines. I admit it is all very inconclusive, and thus so are speculations about vaccines, but still, a parent cannot help but be cautious. Anyway, I see no reason why parental concern in respect to vaccines should be so summarily dismissed, it is quite a legitimate concern, if there have been prior severe reactions, or siblings with such reactions. I do believe that among the medical community there is a concern that all parents will stop vaccinating due to the publicized fears of some parents who rightly suspect their children to be neurologically sensitive and reactive to vaccines. So physicians are likely to downplay those legitimate concerns, without complete and definitive evidence to the contrary, in order to prevent a full scale refusal to vaccinate among the public, which, I would agree, could in itself turn into a big public health problem. nancy grace In , Judy Lovchik <jlovchik@c...> wrote: > Autism in connection to vaccines has been studied to death in large populations, both here and in Europe. Absolutely no connection has been found. There was just another study published on this last month showing no connection. > > Judy > Re: to all: thyroid connection or mercury in vaccines??? > > > > > My brother-in-law is a lawyer/activitst > > who has been studying the autism and mercury (in vaccines) > connection for the > > last several years. He's researching mercury and ocd for us > now...so I'll let you > > know if he turns up anything useful. Yours with my sherlock > holmes hat on (too > > tight probably!) Curlin > > We had our daughter's thyroid tested also. My husband is a > physician and can't let go of the idea of an autoimmune reaction as > the cultprit for OCD. In addition, I have been leary of vaccines > from the beginning. There are way too many cases of autism in New > Jersey where I live. There HAS to be a connection. Please let us > know if you turn up anything on this front. > > > NJ, 8.5, OCD, Zoloft > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Well said Grace! > I think that some children are neurologically sensitive, and being > exposed to environmental triggers that would be inconsequential for > the average child, could create a severe reaction in a sensitive > child. How else to explain why some children have much worse > reactions to vaccinations than others? > > Physicians will advise not to vaccinate in such a case (if there have > been seizures, prolonged high fever, inconsolable crying, floppiness > etc) even without any direct evidence of the cause and effect > relationship-they just have a suspicion that there is such a > relationship and thus advise caution. That is the same suspicion and > caution that parents with seemingly neurologically sensitive children > excercise with regard to vaccines. Just b/c no direct cause/effect > relationship has been demonstrated, does not mean that suspicions > about such a relationship are totally unfounded. > > We cannot easily prevent our children's exposures to things like > viruses (like the strep virus that can possibly trigger autoimmune > reaction and then OCD) or allergens, that for some children trigger > asthma, or can trigger severe food allergies etc. But we can control > their exposure to vaccinations that, in a vulnerable child, could > possibly create an autoimmune response, or high fever, or even > seizure and CNS effects, maybe brain effects. Since no one knows yet > what DOES cause autism and it's spectrums (and other > neurological/brain disorders like OCD) I believe they cannot yet > definitively say what DOES NOT cause it either. I.e they cannot > definitively say that vaccines are NOT a possible cause. > > Tell me what DOES cause neurological disorders like autism, that is > not vaccine related, and then I will dismiss concern about vaccines. > I admit it is all very inconclusive, and thus so are speculations > about vaccines, but still, a parent cannot help but be cautious. > > Anyway, I see no reason why parental concern in respect to vaccines > should be so summarily dismissed, it is quite a legitimate concern, > if there have been prior severe reactions, or siblings with such > reactions. > > I do believe that among the medical community there is a concern that > all parents will stop vaccinating due to the publicized fears of some > parents who rightly suspect their children to be neurologically > sensitive and reactive to vaccines. So physicians are likely to > downplay those legitimate concerns, without complete and definitive > evidence to the contrary, in order to prevent a full scale refusal > to vaccinate among the public, which, I would agree, could in itself > turn into a big public health problem. > > nancy grace Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 My 2-cents......... This is an interesting topic and controversy. There was a TV(?) interview I read the summary of recently, very hostile between the two people (some show where guy interviewed two opponents over topic). I don't think there's anyTHING in this world that some person someWHERE will not have a bad/allergic reaction to - whether it's a food, a dye, a touch of a plant, spider bites, an animal (fur or saliva), the touch of something, mosquito bites (which you can actually become immune to and stop getting those itchy spots), pollen/pollution in the air, aspartame, strawberries, chocolate (my LIFELINE!!!!!), bee stings.......and vaccines! And reactions can be minor to mild to severe. And actually can change over time. Kids outgrow some reactions, adults who were never allergic to things in their youth can become allergic.....(I think that comes with AGE!) Just saying that nothing can be discounted from causing a skin rash to causing severe allergic reaction to causing neurological problems/changes. I suspect Aspergers with , he might have been just at " that age " where a vaccine might have done something, who knows. But my other 2 kids are fine. OH well. Like OCD and research into its origin/cause, one of which is the PANDAS, I'm sure autism and other disorders can have varying suspicions of causes. Research in my opinion does need to continue in areas to continue any improvements/changes from affecting future generations. This IS an interesting topic (vaccines). Hey, ya'll know, " I " never discount ANYTHING! Except maybe space aliens originally populating the world.....I guess......hmmm.....? (space alien comment regarding recent human cloning controversy) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Thought I might add, that without the syndenhams chorea model, which seems to actually have been more stumbled upon than sought out, (sometimes the way science works) who could have guessed of a possible strep/ocd connection- b/c that connection is INDIRECT (strep creates antibodies which, in turn, for unknown reasons in presdipsoded individuals, attack brain tissue). When researchers say there is no connection between vaccines and neurological disorders, it may well be that they have found no DIRECT connection, which is obviously what they are looking for. But there may be an indirect connection that is difficult to demonstrate or to theorize without a model to follow as in pandas/OCD/SC. An indirect connection might be an autoimmune response. With all those antibodies (result of ever increasing numbers of vaccinations) sort of thrust upon a developing child's system- who is to say that there might not be an unusual autoimmune response, with antobodies circulating and possibly affecting other bodily organs such as the brain or CNS? In fact it is hard to believe that such an unusual onslaught of antibodies would NOT cause unusual reactions in sensitive individuals. Still, without proof a such connection, I think it is hard to give credible advice favoring or discouraging vaccinations, other than that based on past or sibling reactions. nanct grace > > I think that some children are neurologically sensitive, and being > > exposed to environmental triggers that would be inconsequential for > > the average child, could create a severe reaction in a sensitive > > child. How else to explain why some children have much worse > > reactions to vaccinations than others? > > > > Physicians will advise not to vaccinate in such a case (if there > have > > been seizures, prolonged high fever, inconsolable crying, > floppiness > > etc) even without any direct evidence of the cause and effect > > relationship-they just have a suspicion that there is such a > > relationship and thus advise caution. That is the same suspicion > and > > caution that parents with seemingly neurologically sensitive > children > > excercise with regard to vaccines. Just b/c no direct cause/effect > > relationship has been demonstrated, does not mean that suspicions > > about such a relationship are totally unfounded. > > > > We cannot easily prevent our children's exposures to things like > > viruses (like the strep virus that can possibly trigger autoimmune > > reaction and then OCD) or allergens, that for some children trigger > > asthma, or can trigger severe food allergies etc. But we can > control > > their exposure to vaccinations that, in a vulnerable child, could > > possibly create an autoimmune response, or high fever, or even > > seizure and CNS effects, maybe brain effects. Since no one knows > yet > > what DOES cause autism and it's spectrums (and other > > neurological/brain disorders like OCD) I believe they cannot yet > > definitively say what DOES NOT cause it either. I.e they cannot > > definitively say that vaccines are NOT a possible cause. > > > > Tell me what DOES cause neurological disorders like autism, that is > > not vaccine related, and then I will dismiss concern about > vaccines. > > I admit it is all very inconclusive, and thus so are speculations > > about vaccines, but still, a parent cannot help but be cautious. > > > > Anyway, I see no reason why parental concern in respect to vaccines > > should be so summarily dismissed, it is quite a legitimate concern, > > if there have been prior severe reactions, or siblings with such > > reactions. > > > > I do believe that among the medical community there is a concern > that > > all parents will stop vaccinating due to the publicized fears of > some > > parents who rightly suspect their children to be neurologically > > sensitive and reactive to vaccines. So physicians are likely to > > downplay those legitimate concerns, without complete and definitive > > evidence to the contrary, in order to prevent a full scale refusal > > to vaccinate among the public, which, I would agree, could in > itself > > turn into a big public health problem. > > > > nancy grace Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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