Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 At 11:47 AM 12/7/02 -0000, Neil Gardner wrote: >Did your mother smoke >during pregnancy? I know that my mother smoked all through my childhood until I was something like 12-13 years old. My mother believes that her smoking was the cause of my near-continuous ear and upper-respiratory-tract infections during childhood. I don't know for sure if she smoked while she was pregnant with me but since she smoked before I was born, it's quite likely that she smoked while pregnant with me. >Was your mother subjected to any other adverse >environmental factors such as contaminants, radiation, medicines or >substance abuse that may truggered autism? I seem to vaguely remember her once saying that she had German Measles in her seventh month of pregnancy with me. (My research shows that birth defects are unlikely if German Measles are contracted after the 16th week of pregnancy, but who *really* knows? And, hey, if the vaccine for Rubella is rumored to cause autism why couldn't Rubella itself cause it? some links I've encountered (such as http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/autism.cfm) say that Rubella contracted in the first few months of pregnancy can cause autism.) Then again, I'm fairly convinced as to where my own autism came from. My father is immensely aspie and so was his father. My mother's late sister had autism and mental retardation and my mother's brother's daughter gave birth to an autistic child. It's quite clear to me that the autistic aspects of my brain were gifted to me by my genetics. (Though I don't rule out other mitigating/exacerbating factors such as rubella, smoking, etc.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 Neil Gardner wrote: .. Simple question. Did your mother smoke during pregnancy? Was your mother subjected to any other adverse environmental factors such as contaminants, radiation, medicines or substance abuse that may truggered autism? -----------------My mother apparently was on some kind of tranquilizer from her pregnancy with me to the time she died. (told to me by my father). She also smoked and drank 'socially' during her pregnancy Nanne Anyway FWIW read this article (original URL http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2151289.stm ) Smoking mothers link to autism Smokers were 40% more likely to have an autistic child Smoking during early pregnancy could increase a child's risk of developing autism. Swedish researchers studied over 2,000 children and found that those mothers who smoked regularly were 40% more likely to have autistic children. Researcher Dr Hultman from the Department of Medical Epidemiology at the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, said there was already thought to be a link between the growth of the foetus in the womb and autism. She said that because smoking also restricts growth it could have a similar effect. We were surprised that smoking during early pregnancy was an independent risk factor for autism Dr Hultman " We have tested the hypothesis of reduced growth in utero related to other psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia and anorexia nervosa and there might be similar early risk factors. Smoking " As smoking during pregnancy, maternal age and mother's country of birth is all known to influence children's birth weight and foetal growth we included these variables. " However we were surprised that smoking during early pregnancy was an independent risk factor for autism, which has not been shown earlier. " She said that similar studies on animals had shown that exposure to nicotine while in the womb had physical and behavioural effects and could lead to problems with the function of the brain. Autism is a developmental disability that affects the way a person communicates and interacts with other people. People with autism cannot relate to others in a meaningful way and they also have trouble making sense of the world at large. As a result, their ability to develop friendships is impaired and they also have a limited capacity to understand other people's feelings. Autism is often also associated with learning disabilities. More research Dr Hultman said there was now a need for further extensive studies to separate the effects of smoking from other environmental and genetic factors. Potter, of the National Autistic Society, agreed that the study in the Journal Epidemiology showed there was an urgent need for further research. " Those who smoked daily in pregnancy were 1.4 times more likely to have a child with autism than those who didn't smoke, according to this study, " he said. " This is quite a small confidence interval and would need further studies either to confirm or disprove it. It seems unlikely to explain much about the overall influence of autism. " While we know that autism is a strongly genetic condition there is an urgent need to conduct further studies to determine which environmental risk factors are involved in triggering it. " Mr Potter added: " At prenatal stages several factors including carbon monoxide, drugs and endocrine factors have been suggested. " The recent Medical Research Review of Autism considered these to be only speculative at present but further studies are needed. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 Neil Gardner dreamed lazily into the stars: >Simple question. Did your mother smoke >during pregnancy? Nope. From what I've heard, she became a zealot about making sure everything she did was healthy. She ate wonderfully, took vitamins, didn't drink, didn't smoke, etc. The doctors say that the only reason I survived to term and was as strong as I was at birth (considering my internal defects) was because she took such unusually good care of herself. >Was your mother subjected to any other adverse >environmental factors such as contaminants, radiation, medicines or >substance abuse that may truggered autism? Not really. She had a flu very early in pregnancy that might have triggered all of my mutations -- the neurological oddities & birth defects are quite possibly rooted in the same early stage of prenatal development -- but that's a really sketchy guess on my part. Otherwise, nada. DeGraf ~~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy " Too much of a good thing can make you crazy. " -- Jethro Tull Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 Neil wrote: >...Simple question. Did your mother smoke >during pregnancy? Was your mother subjected to any other adverse >environmental factors such as contaminants, radiation, medicines or >substance abuse that may truggered autism? My mother smoked during all four of her pregnancies. Jane >Anyway FWIW read this article (original URL >http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2151289.stm ) > >Smoking mothers link to autism > >Smokers were 40% more likely to have an autistic child [snip] > " Those who smoked daily in pregnancy were 1.4 times more likely to have a >child with autism than those who didn't smoke, according to this study, " he >said. > > " This is quite a small confidence interval and would need further studies >either to confirm or disprove it. It seems unlikely to explain much about >the overall influence of autism. > > " While we know that autism is a strongly genetic condition there is an >urgent need to conduct further studies to determine which environmental risk >factors are involved in triggering it. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 Mine smokes, but she says that she quit smoking when she was pregnant with me. Of course, there were other environmental factors that could have been contributors, also. She and my father lived in a place just off the miltary post in the Panama Canal Zone that could only be described as a hovel. The water had to be boiled before they could use it, the house was infested with insects, and the power was cut off from six in the evening to six in the morning. I know the unsanitary conditions must have contributed to the kidney infection my mother had in the fifth month of pregnancy, which may have contributed to my premature birth (and ultimately my cerebral palsy as well). Re: Smoking mothers link to autism Neil wrote: >...Simple question. Did your mother smoke >during pregnancy? Was your mother subjected to any other adverse >environmental factors such as contaminants, radiation, medicines or >substance abuse that may truggered autism? My mother smoked during all four of her pregnancies. Jane >Anyway FWIW read this article (original URL >http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2151289.stm ) > >Smoking mothers link to autism > >Smokers were 40% more likely to have an autistic child [snip] > " Those who smoked daily in pregnancy were 1.4 times more likely to have a >child with autism than those who didn't smoke, according to this study, " he >said. > > " This is quite a small confidence interval and would need further studies >either to confirm or disprove it. It seems unlikely to explain much about >the overall influence of autism. > > " While we know that autism is a strongly genetic condition there is an >urgent need to conduct further studies to determine which environmental risk >factors are involved in triggering it. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 Neil Gardner wrote: > I initially dismissed links between the infamous MMR vaccine and autism. > Indeed I believed vaccination to be generally beneficial as they are > supposed to strengthen our immune system and have saved millions of lives. > However, my views may be changing. I hope not. It is no coincidence that smallpox is functionally an extinct disease, and that polio quit being a menace right about the time of the Salk vaccine. > What's certain is the massive increase in autistic spectrum diagnoses and > autistic-like behaviour. The increase in diagnoses is fact, but I do not know that it relates to an increase in incidence. The most commonly quoted study that shows that the autism rates are on the rise, around here, is the California state study... and that study included AS and autism. Certainly, AS is more recognized now, and a child with that is far more likely to get a proper dx now than twenty or thirty years ago. How many of us here on this list were only officially diagnosed as adults, or never? Only a few of the members of this list, I bet, were diagnosed as autistic when we were young. As such, the numbers from those years do not include us. We were there, we were autistic then as now, but the lack of knowledge prevented proper diagnosis. Even now, a lot of clinicians are not skilled at making a proper ASD diagnosis. The awareness of AS and HFA is still increasing, and as more doctors get the word, the diagnosis rate will increase, even if the base ASD population is constant. In the past, people like us were diagnosed as hyperactive/ADD/ADHD, schizophrenic, schizo-affective, avoidant personality disorder, schizoid personality disorder, and any number of other things. That still happens today, but the chance of getting a proper dx these days is an order of magnitude higher than twenty or thirty years ago. On the other end of the spectrum, increasing autism awareness means that low-functioning autistics that may have been diagnosed as simply retarded, or retarded with any of the conditions enumerated above, will be diagnosed as autistic. > I believe environmental factors (such as an > increasingly atomised society with everyone cocooned in their home glued to > electronic gadgets) play a major role in bringing out more autistic > behaviour. Autism is related to having an autistic brain, and that happens before birth. The brain abnormalities that make autism could only have happened when the neural tissue in the brian differentiates, which is in the first trimester of pregnancy. > Proponents of the MMR-Autism link claim it's the mercury in MMR > that induces autism in susceptible individuals. That is incorrect. The MMR never contained any mercury. The first 'M' in MMR stands for measles, and the measles vaccine is an active culture. Thimerosal is used because it kills microbial pathogens-- that would include the measles culture. The MMR link has now been strongly refuted, as the recent Danish (IIRC) study showed. The fact that both the MMR, which never had any mercury in it, and the mercury of other vaccines, are blamed for autism shows me that the people that wish to link these vaccines are grasping at straws. So many parents remember the autism starting at about the same time as the vaccines (which is a mere coincidence in timing; so many vaccines are given in the first few years, it is no wonder that one of them would happen at about the time when autism is noticed for the first time). The human memory then fills in the blanks, and it is remembered as causality... " he lost his speech right after the MMR, " the mother says, when in reality there may have been a gap of a month or more, or the speech could have actually gone away first... but only struck mom as unusual after the MMR was given. The lack of reliability of human memories in eyewitness testimony is well-known, and it is also known that five people that saw the same thing will give five different stories, often differing strongly. That is why real scientific data must be ascertained through carefully constructed double-blind studies, not parental testimony. Yet much of what is called " evidence " in autism is nothing more than parental anecdotes. That is enough to point to a possible link, which would be the impetus for further study, but certainly, not enough to recommend treatment plans, lawsuits, and other things that should be based upon fact. Regardless, this is what we see today. Many people are suing the makers of the MMR for making their kids autistic... I saw two of the lawyers that are spearheading this moneygrubbing at an autism conference last year. Parents all around the world are chelating their kids to get the mercury out, et cetera. All sorts of treatments that are scientifically untested and of questionable safety are being promoted as if they are proven cures. > Now I grew up in the pre-MMR > era, so it obviously didn't affect me, but I do know my mother smoked 20-30 > high-tar cigarettes during pregnancy. Simple question. Did your mother smoke > during pregnancy? Yes, she did. But so did just about everyone else then; it would be hard to find a link here. In fact, smoking has been on the decline for some time, whereas the rates of autism are said to be increasing. There seems to be inverse proportionality between autism and rates of smoking. > Was your mother subjected to any other adverse > environmental factors such as contaminants, radiation, medicines or > substance abuse that may truggered autism? Not that I know of. > People with autism cannot relate to others in a meaningful way and they also > have trouble making sense of the world at large. Really? This certainly is news to me. > " Those who smoked daily in pregnancy were 1.4 times more likely to have a > child with autism than those who didn't smoke, according to this study, " he > said. > > " This is quite a small confidence interval and would need further studies > either to confirm or disprove it. It seems unlikely to explain much about > the overall influence of autism. Truly. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 > Mine smokes, but she says that she quit smoking when she was pregnant > with me. My mother never smoked. She never drank alcohol. She never took so much as an aspirin when she was pregnant with me. I did grow up in a very badly polluted town, however, with smoke from the local pulp and paper mill blanketing the town. I attribute my AS to the circumstances of my birth, however. My mother had pre-eclampsia, and almost died. My sister had her daughter under similar circumstances, and my niece has non-verbal learning disability. Iris Iris Gray, Puff, Calli and Munchkin Proud to be Canuckistanian Personal website: http://victoria.tc.ca/~rainbow/ Toastmasters website: http://victoria.tc.ca/Community/Bb/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2002 Report Share Posted December 7, 2002 , Thanks for such a detailed reply. My post aimed to stimulate debate. I do not ideologically support the MMR-Autism hypothesis. However, I disagree with your assessment that only autism diagnosis rate has increased. IMHO there are considerably more children exhibiting autistic-like behaviour. I know this from my involvement with PHAD Fife (people with high-functioning autistic disorders). In our region, Fife, the incidence has now surpassed 1/100. UK-wide it's 91/1000. All parents talk of major behavioural problems. We're talking about kids with problems far greater than those I experienced. My problems related chiefly to a slight delay in speech acquisition and later difficulties with socialisation. I might have wondered around the playground mapping out an imaginary world. I might have lectured others about my special interests, which thankfully changed every six months or so. I might have had my tantrums, but by and large I was a placid boy who'd spend hours on end building towns with lego, gluing together plastic rockets and spaceships, experimenting with codes or watching documentaries on TV. I even went through phases as a latter-day hippie (at the age of 11/12) when I grew my hair down to my shoulders and later switched to being a punk (well for a few months anyway). The new generation of kids diagnosed with AS have constant tantrums and severe learning difficulties at school. I have long suffered from recurrent headaches. My head often feels heavy. I feel an invisible separates me from everyone else, but I try my best to act responsibly. I won't say normal, because I don't like the whole concept. I'm beginning to doubt whether I would have benefited from a diagnosis as a child. My nagging suspicion is that some individuals are more susceptible to a chemical trigger that changes the way ourt neuroreceptors interact. I certainly do not believe the MMR vaccine is either sole or main cause of autism (and neither to proponents of the MMR-autism link). However, it may be one of many contributing environmental factors. All technological innovations have their downsides and that goes for medicine too. In my time kids were routinely sent round a neighbour's house to catch measles when they were young. I had measles, rubella (aka German measles) but not mumps. Now everyone knows mercury is a highly toxic substance, so it's highly unlikely a multibillion dollar pharmaceutical multinational (who pour millions into the coffers of the UK and US political parties and media) would freely admit it contains mercury or would word such a statement in a misleading and obfuscating way. Thimerosal contains four main ingredients:: ethyl mercuric chloride, thiosalicylic acid, sodium hydroxide and ethanol. The hypothesis is that it may trigger autistic spectrum disorders in individuals who fail to process heavy metals, also present in cigarettes in trace amounts, in the usual way. For more info thimerosal read http://www.thimerosal-news.com/html/info.html . Smoking restricts blood supply to the growing foetus, but is obviously not the sole cause. Other personal information that may be of interest. My younger brother was a blue baby (lack of oxygen in the blood supply) and died within 3 hours and my mother worked for several years as an army radiologist. Even if I were convinced MMR is not any way related to autism, I would still support an open debate, full public inquiry on the subject and full public access to research. Call me a conspiracy theorist, if you like, but Prez Bush junior has just asked the US Court of Federal Claims to seal MMR Vaccine Records. So much for open government! BTW don't expect a BBC journalist to know what it is like to be an autie... Neil Re: Smoking mothers link to autism .. > > I hope not. It is no coincidence that smallpox is functionally an extinct disease, and > that polio quit being a menace right about the time of the Salk vaccine. > > > > What's certain is the massive increase in autistic spectrum diagnoses and > > autistic-like behaviour. > > The increase in diagnoses is fact, but I do not know that it relates to an increase in > incidence. The most commonly quoted study that shows that the autism rates are on the > rise, around here, is the California state study... and that study included AS and autism. > Certainly, AS is more recognized now, and a child with that is far more likely to get a > proper dx now than twenty or thirty years ago. How many of us here on this list were only > officially diagnosed as adults, or never? Only a few of the members of this list, I bet, > were diagnosed as autistic when we were young. As such, the numbers from those years do > not include us. We were there, we were autistic then as now, but the lack of knowledge > prevented proper diagnosis. Even now, a lot of clinicians are not skilled at making a > proper ASD diagnosis. The awareness of AS and HFA is still increasing, and as more > doctors get the word, the diagnosis rate will increase, even if the base ASD population is > constant. > > In the past, people like us were diagnosed as hyperactive/ADD/ADHD, schizophrenic, > schizo-affective, avoidant personality disorder, schizoid personality disorder, and any > number of other things. That still happens today, but the chance of getting a proper dx > these days is an order of magnitude higher than twenty or thirty years ago. > > On the other end of the spectrum, increasing autism awareness means that low-functioning > autistics that may have been diagnosed as simply retarded, or retarded with any of the > conditions enumerated above, will be diagnosed as autistic. > > > I believe environmental factors (such as an > > increasingly atomised society with everyone cocooned in their home glued to > > electronic gadgets) play a major role in bringing out more autistic > > behaviour. > > Autism is related to having an autistic brain, and that happens before birth. The brain > abnormalities that make autism could only have happened when the neural tissue in the > brian differentiates, which is in the first trimester of pregnancy. > > > > Proponents of the MMR-Autism link claim it's the mercury in MMR > > that induces autism in susceptible individuals. > > That is incorrect. The MMR never contained any mercury. The first 'M' in MMR stands for > measles, and the measles vaccine is an active culture. Thimerosal is used because it > kills microbial pathogens-- that would include the measles culture. > > The MMR link has now been strongly refuted, as the recent Danish (IIRC) study showed. The > fact that both the MMR, which never had any mercury in it, and the mercury of other > vaccines, are blamed for autism shows me that the people that wish to link these vaccines > are grasping at straws. So many parents remember the autism starting at about the same > time as the vaccines (which is a mere coincidence in timing; so many vaccines are given in > the first few years, it is no wonder that one of them would happen at about the time when > autism is noticed for the first time). The human memory then fills in the blanks, and it > is remembered as causality... " he lost his speech right after the MMR, " the mother says, > when in reality there may have been a gap of a month or more, or the speech could have > actually gone away first... but only struck mom as unusual after the MMR was given. > > The lack of reliability of human memories in eyewitness testimony is well-known, and it is > also known that five people that saw the same thing will give five different stories, > often differing strongly. That is why real scientific data must be ascertained through > carefully constructed double-blind studies, not parental testimony. Yet much of what is > called " evidence " in autism is nothing more than parental anecdotes. That is enough to > point to a possible link, which would be the impetus for further study, but certainly, not > enough to recommend treatment plans, lawsuits, and other things that should be based upon > fact. Regardless, this is what we see today. Many people are suing the makers of the MMR > for making their kids autistic... I saw two of the lawyers that are spearheading this > moneygrubbing at an autism conference last year. Parents all around the world are > chelating their kids to get the mercury out, et cetera. All sorts of treatments that are > scientifically untested and of questionable safety are being promoted as if they are > proven cures. > > > > Now I grew up in the pre-MMR > > era, so it obviously didn't affect me, but I do know my mother smoked 20-30 > > high-tar cigarettes during pregnancy. Simple question. Did your mother smoke > > during pregnancy? > > Yes, she did. But so did just about everyone else then; it would be hard to find a link > here. In fact, smoking has been on the decline for some time, whereas the rates of autism > are said to be increasing. There seems to be inverse proportionality between autism and > rates of smoking. > > > > Was your mother subjected to any other adverse > > environmental factors such as contaminants, radiation, medicines or > > substance abuse that may truggered autism? > > Not that I know of. > > > > People with autism cannot relate to others in a meaningful way and they also > > have trouble making sense of the world at large. > > Really? This certainly is news to me. > > > > " Those who smoked daily in pregnancy were 1.4 times more likely to have a > > child with autism than those who didn't smoke, according to this study, " he > > said. > > > > " This is quite a small confidence interval and would need further studies > > either to confirm or disprove it. It seems unlikely to explain much about > > the overall influence of autism. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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