Guest guest Posted February 22, 2009 Report Share Posted February 22, 2009 I sent her this article " FDA pulls DMSA and hope from children with autism and ADHD by Dr. C. L'Hommedieu " which someone posted on this list and here was my sister's response (typical medical doctor, sigh) " Just wondering if you've come across any evidence for the connection between lead and the conditions Dr.L'Hommedieu mentions above. He alludes to an " association " between them, which is difficult to interpret and as we both know far from cause and effect - it could be just a nice coincidence or could be spot on - who knows. He loosely ties " inhibition of enzymes needed for neurotransmitters " (due to lead presumably) with epilespy - yet epilepsy is incredibly complex, defined as far as I'm aware as " the recurrent paroxysmal transient disturbance of brain function due to disturbance of electrical activity in the brain, where the disturbance is unrelated to infection or acute cerebral insult " - i.e. the predominant abnormality being disturbance in electrical activity not specifically associated with disturbance in neurotransmitters - in fact I haven't heard of neurotransmitter imbalance at all in epilepsy - which of course doesn't mean it's not true but with all the medication aimed at rebalancing neurotrasmitters you'd think the drug companies would be onto that if it were the case - that's me being a conspiracist against evil drug companies I'm wondering what sort of evidence he has to make such claims and would be interested in any research he may have been involved in. " So here is my response to her. I wonder what others may have responded to her?? " Well that is a very tricky thing to answer precisely because the answer is so complex and goes beyond the limits of science. The one thing you have to remember is that, despite how we like to differentiate ourselves from our environment and from other animals, especially mammals, on our planet, we are all linked in complex ways. For over 30 years now, environmentalists and biologists have been studying how introdcution of toxins from man-made activity has impacted our environment and animals. See these sources as just examples, though if you were to research it you would literally get over a million hits (this is not new knowledge, I even learned about this from my high school environmental studies class): http://www.epa.gov/air/lead/health.html http://www.lead.org.au/lanv1n2/lanv1n2-8.html http://www.lenntech.com/Periodic-chart-elements/pb-en.htm Now...the negative effects of man-made toxins on animals and environmental ecosystems (with chemicals such as lead, mercury, arsenic - while found in trace amounts in nature, but extremly high levels are typically linked to the dumping of these toxins into the enviroment by man or from man made activity, such as the case with lead and car exhaust) are not disputed among biologists and environmentalists...and because we are (in as much as we like to think we are not) linked to the environment, after all we are mammals, we are animals, accepting that we are also impacted by these toxins that are man made is complex and involves politics, social dynamics (i.e. typically research,even the research I am sending below is linked to social-economic status due to many factors including exposure, education, etc), economics, lobbying by special interest groups, etc.... Furthermore, we cannot take complex biological systems (including the human body) and expect that logical scientific deductions, such as cause and effect, to be applicable. This is because there is simply so much that we don't know about how the body works, than what we do know. Yes science can give us clues, but it certainly cannot even come close to providing all the answers. Also, since is very limited precisely because it is politically and economically charged and as Boyd Haley is often quoted as saying (the chemist whose area of research is in mercury and the effects on our environment and the human body), there is good science and bad science, and hence good medicine and bad medicine. I don't know much about psychiatry, but I know enough about obstetrics that I can say with certainty that it is one of the least evidence based areas of medicine, and I really wonder if we can say the same for psychiatry considering there is so much we don't know. There is a lot of research that completely goes against current obstetrical practices in the US (vs countries like Sweden and Findland, which have the highest safety records of birth and incidently are the most hands off, most births occuring at home with midwives). Henci Goer published one book that is composed of studies with findings that go against pretty much all routine obstetrical care in the U.S. (titled " Obstetric Myths Versus Research Realities: A Guide to the Medical Literature " ). I'm only using obstetrics as an example of bad medicine (in this case good science and bad medicine,though often times when you have a politically charged topic like the use of thermisol in vaccines, you can see examples of both bad science and bad medicine, as Boyd Haley goes into great detail and I would strongly recommend reading some of his research findings that I sent you earlier on). It is interesting that while publically, the government has denied the dangers of thermisol or dental amalgams to human health, thermisol was slowly removed from vaccines. So all of a suddan, while still denying that thermisol injured millions of children, they just removed it. Similarly, the FDA now cites warnings against the use of dental amalgams, but quietly, without making a big public fuss about it. So you have to wonder why do these things not make big news?? Why not admit that thermisol is in fact dangerous to human health (especially to a developing newborn's brain), why not admit that amalgams are dangerous to human health (even the amount of mercury found in one amalgam filling can kill off an entire lake of fish - I don't know the exact numbers but there is a study somewhere on my computer that calculates precisely how much mercury it takes to kill all the fish of a lake of a certain volume). The point is there is A LOT of research being done on man produced heavy metals and the enviroment, on man produced heavy metals and the effects on animals, etc...........but when it comes to heavy metals and the effect on people,research is more behind because it is politically, socially and economically charged). Also, the problem with cause and effect type of studies is that they assume that the human body is mechanical and follows the mechanistic rules, which it often does not. Even the medical model of isolating organs and studying x organ and z effect on x organ can only take your knowledge so far,because it is beyond human knowledge to know exactly how the human body works holistically, how the effects of z, while not direct on organ y, can still be found but not measured in a quantitative manner, that doesn't mean there aren't any effects. It is rather ridiculous to study organs in isolation with each other, just as it is ridiculous to think that human beings are immune to the effects of the man produced toxins in the enviroment, as if we are somehow magically isolated from our environment. But that is the limit of science so why put down science? It is not infallible precisely because it is limited by human knowedge and interpretation, which is finite. I don't think science can provide us with all the answers but I don't expect it to and I have worked with enough scientists when I was doing my undergrad in biochem (before I switched to joint english and biology) to know that most scientists also see science as providing us with only limited knowledge. There is much more we don't know and science often just gives us more questions rather than providing us with straight forward answers. Of course that doesn't stop the medical community and the pharmaceutical companies from using the rhetoric of science to assert their authority. Most pharmaceutical funded studies are not done nearly long enough, and do not answer nearly enough questions to satisfy questions of safety, hence why so many drugs are put on the market only to be later recalled. So really, I just don't think your cause and effect arguement applies, because for it to apply we would have to be mechanical beings rather than the complex beings that we are. Yes, of course it is difficult to prove scientifically just what effects are caused by certain toxins - because that entails isolating all the other variables, which just doesn't happen in the natural world. Life does not exist in a vaccuum as it does in a science lab. That doesn't mean these links are not there. If you take science to be the ultimate truth, then you are putting man into the position of being all knowing, which is just simply ridiculous. We are merely trying to grasp our extremly complex world and we are not even close to understanding just how this world, or how we exactly function in harmony with other animals and our environment. What really irks me about psychiatrists is that they would rather just say, such and such a disease or behaviour (i.e. scizophrenia) happens, but we don't know why, we just know that x drug seems to help, and the benefits outweigh the side effects, without ever getting to the root cause. So I really wonder, why are doctors and psychiatrists SO quick to dismiss environmental effects, in particular toxins? How is it that we can be immune (yet not animals) to the effects of these toxins, that are present in a greater concentration than ever in human history due to the scientific/technological revolution? Is it precisely because the question is so complex that doctors would rather not bother? Is it precisely because this would entail in excepting that our science,and hence understanding of our world, even our man-made world is limited and beyond our abilty/knowledge to comprehend? I can certainly understand that it IS just easier to give someone a pill and call it a day without getting at the root cause. I can certainly understand that it is far simpler to not pose these questions, for to pose these questions is to undermine our own authority over the world and over our own existance. But none the less, there are many scientists world wide who are still trying to answer these questions, so good for them. I am personally of the opinon that it is silly that we need scientists to valid common sense observations (if x and y toxin are having r and s effects on other mammals, how much of a stretch is it that they would have SOME (not necessarily the same) effect on humans?). I also wouldn't hold my breath in having science come up with the answers as to how do we treat autism, and do vaccines contribute to autism? If I had an autistic child and my choice was to wait until science " proved " that my child could be helped by using a very safe sulfer compound, such as DMSA, I wouldn't wait for those answers from the scientific community, my child would not have that much time. That there are hundreds of children who have been helped by DMSA for lead poisoning and other heavy metal poisoning (from vaccines or otherwise) is indication enough that you have to wonder why the government sponcered scientists haven't been investigating these questions. It is much easier to just say these parents and scientists who do support them (such as Boyd Haley, Andy Cutler, etc) are quacks than to examine an area of science/medicine that is completely vested econmically and politically. Why would I give so much power (such as the fate over my child's ultimate health) to the government or to doctors who with or without their knowledge, have such a political and economical gain in an area such as vaccinations? (To their credit, most doctors aren't aware that vaccines are politically and economically charged - they just simply see it as good medicine and don't question it). So back to the question of lead and psychiatric symptoms. Luckily, lead is one of the most studied toxins, precisely because it is the least politically and economically charged (unlike mercury, which is found in amalgam fillings and was used as an ingredient in many vaccines until recently). Because lead contamination is generally attributed to things like toys from china, old paint, and car exhaust, it is much safer to do research on lead, than it would be to do research into mercury, where you would have special interest groups with lots of lobbying power and very powerful attornies on their side. So here is one site that cites a study where lead is linked to schizophrenia: http://encyclopedia.stateuniversity.com/pages/13252/lead-poisoning.html " However, a s Hopkins report by Tomas Guilarte stated " It has been known for some time that lead is a potent inhibitor of the NMDA receptor, a protein known to play an important role in brain development and cognition. In this study we demonstrate that lead exposure decreased the amount of NMDA receptor gene and protein in a part of the brain called the hippocampus. " They found that children who had been exposed to high levels of lead in the womb were more than twice as likely to go on to develop schizophrenia. " Incidently, the same article points to the links of siezures and lead poisoning: " The symptoms of lead poisoning include neurological problems, such as reduced IQ, nausea, abdominal pain, irritability, insomnia, excess lethargy or hyperactivity, headache and, in extreme cases, seizure and coma. " Here is an article that sites scientists who have been doing research on lead and violent behaviour: http://articles.latimes.com/2008/may/28/science/sci-lead28 " In the first of the new studies, environmental health research Kim N. Dietrich of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine studied 250 of the original group, correlating their lead levels with adult criminal arrest records from Hamilton County, Ohio. They found that 55% of the subjects (63% of males) had been arrested, and that the average was five arrests between the ages of 18 and 24. The higher the blood lead level at any time in childhood, the greater the likelihood of arrests. “The strongest association was with violent criminal activity – murder, rape domestic violence, assault, robbery and possession of weapons,” Dietrich said. " Another article here explores the relationship between lead poisoning and antisocial behavior: http://www.calisafe.org/_disc1/00000032.htm " University of Pittsburgh researcher Dr. Herbert Needleman, professor of child psychiatry and pediatrics, examined the bone lead levels of 216 youths convicted in a juvenile court and 201 non- delinquent controls from high schools in Pittsburgh. " Of all the causes of juvenile delinquency, lead exposure is perhaps the most preventable, " said Needleman. " These results should be a call to action for legislators to protect our children by requiring landlords to not simply disclose known instances of lead paint in their properties, but to remove it. " These reports join a growing body of evidence linking lead to health, cognitive and behavioral problems in children. In the U.S., almost a million children under the age of six suffer from lead poisoning. " " Lead exposure can cause permanent damage to the brain and other organs. Research shows that children with elevated blood lead levels are seven times more likely to drop out of school and twice as likely to lose a few years in language acquisition. Prior studies by Needleman linking lead exposure to lower IQ scores, short attention spans and poor language skills helped prompt nationwide government bans on lead from paint, gasoline and food and beverage cans. But there are still a number of ways in which children, and adults, may be exposed to lead. Most children who suffer from lead poisoning are exposed to invisible lead dust that is released when older paint is peeling, damaged or disturbed, or by eating chips of lead paint. Drinking water that comes from lead pipes or lead soldered fittings can expose children to lead, as can breathing air contaminated by the lead smelting, refining and manufacturing industries " This link discusses an interesting article on how an enriching environment can protect the brain against lead exposure, which would explain again, why social-economic status plays a role in environmental toxin poisoning and related behavioural problems http://www.scienceblog.com/community/older/2001/D/200114426.html (Another example that throws off any cause and effect arguments - when you have to study a topic such as heavy metal poisoning from an interdisciplinary approach - economic, political, social, biological, biochemical, medical, enviromental, any kind of cause and effect relationships become just mere threads in a complex web). Here is just one mere example of how incredibly limited science is to understanding these complex relationships in biological beings: " Although lead is the most studied of hundreds of known or suspected neurotoxic air pollutants, other heavy metals, pesticides, and organic solvents also cause neurobehavioral dysfunction. Expanded research in behavioral neurotoxicology is urgently needed. Changes in mood, cognition, and behavior are endpoints that need to be evaluated in addition to cancer rates or mortality data and may be more common. In various studies, increased levels of air pollutants are accompanied by increased psychiatric emergency calls and hospital admissions, behavior changes, and a lessened sense of well-being. Irritating odors and cigarette smoke have been found to increase aggressive behavior, and to decrease helping behavior and altruism, leading to a degradation of social interaction. " http://www.nutramed.com/environment/carschemicals.htm " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2009 Report Share Posted February 23, 2009 Good for you!!! I definately want you on my side in battle and I understand that sometimes it is difficult to set other's straight...I had a disagreement with a long time friend of mine because she is a nurse and thinks she is right! We all need to be able to show our compassion for what we are doing with our children to help them as the medical system has little medically to offer our children. > > I sent her this article " FDA pulls DMSA and hope from children with autism and ADHD by Dr. C. L'Hommedieu " which someone posted on this list and here was my sister's response (typical medical doctor, sigh) > > " Just wondering if you've come across any evidence for the connection > between lead and the conditions Dr.L'Hommedieu mentions above. He > alludes to an " association " between them, which is difficult to > interpret and as we both know far from cause and effect - it could be > just a nice coincidence or could be spot on - who knows. He loosely > ties " inhibition of enzymes needed for neurotransmitters " (due to > lead > presumably) with epilespy - yet epilepsy is incredibly complex, > defined as far as I'm aware as " the recurrent paroxysmal transient > disturbance of brain function due to disturbance of electrical > activity in the brain, where the disturbance is unrelated to infection > or acute cerebral insult " - i.e. the predominant abnormality being > disturbance in electrical activity not specifically associated with > disturbance in neurotransmitters - in fact I haven't heard of > neurotransmitter imbalance at all in epilepsy - which of course > doesn't mean it's not true but with all the medication aimed at > rebalancing neurotrasmitters you'd think the drug companies would be > onto that if it were the case - that's me being a conspiracist against > evil drug companies > I'm wondering what sort of evidence he has to make such claims and > would be interested in any research he may have been involved in. " > > So here is my response to her. I wonder what others may have responded to her?? > > " Well that is a very tricky thing to answer precisely because the answer is so complex and goes beyond the limits of science. > > The one thing you have to remember is that, despite how we like to differentiate ourselves from our environment and from other animals, especially mammals, on our planet, we are all linked in complex ways. > > For over 30 years now, environmentalists and biologists have been studying how introdcution of toxins from man-made activity has impacted our environment and animals. > > See these sources as just examples, though if you were to research it you would literally get over a million hits (this is not new knowledge, I even learned about this from my high school environmental studies class): > > http://www.epa.gov/air/lead/health.html > http://www.lead.org.au/lanv1n2/lanv1n2-8.html > http://www.lenntech.com/Periodic-chart-elements/pb-en.htm > > Now...the negative effects of man-made toxins on animals and environmental ecosystems (with chemicals such as lead, mercury, arsenic - while found in trace amounts in nature, but extremly high levels are typically linked to the dumping of these toxins into the enviroment by man or from man made activity, such as the case with lead and car exhaust) are not disputed among biologists and environmentalists...and because we are (in as much as we like to think we are not) linked to the environment, after all we are mammals, we are animals, accepting that we are also impacted by these toxins that are man made is complex and involves politics, social dynamics (i.e. typically research,even the research I am sending below is linked to social-economic status due to many factors including exposure, education, etc), economics, lobbying by special interest groups, etc.... > > Furthermore, we cannot take complex biological systems (including the human body) and expect that logical scientific deductions, such as cause and effect, to be applicable. This is because there is simply so much that we don't know about how the body works, than what we do know. Yes science can give us clues, but it certainly cannot even come close to providing all the answers. > > Also, since is very limited precisely because it is politically and economically charged and as Boyd Haley is often quoted as saying (the chemist whose area of research is in mercury > and the effects on our environment and the human body), there is good science and bad science, and hence good medicine and bad medicine. > > I don't know much about psychiatry, but I know enough about obstetrics that I can say with certainty that it is one of the least evidence based areas of medicine, and I really wonder if we can say the same for psychiatry considering there is so much we don't know. > > There is a lot of research that completely goes against current obstetrical practices in the US (vs countries like Sweden and Findland, which have the highest safety records of birth and incidently are the most hands off, most births occuring at home with midwives). Henci Goer published one book that is composed of studies with findings that go against pretty much all routine obstetrical care in the U.S. (titled " Obstetric Myths Versus Research Realities: A Guide to the Medical Literature " ). > > I'm only using obstetrics as an example of bad medicine (in this case good science and bad medicine,though often times when you have a politically charged topic like the use of thermisol in vaccines, you can see examples of both bad science and bad medicine, as Boyd Haley goes into great detail and I would strongly recommend reading some of his research findings that I sent you earlier on). It is interesting that while publically, the government has denied the dangers of thermisol or dental amalgams to human health, thermisol was slowly removed from vaccines. So all of a suddan, while still denying that thermisol injured millions of children, they just removed it. Similarly, the FDA now cites warnings against the use of dental amalgams, but quietly, without making a big public fuss about it. > > So you have to wonder why do these things not make big news?? Why not admit that thermisol is in fact dangerous to human health (especially to a developing newborn's brain), why not admit that amalgams are dangerous to human health (even the amount of mercury found in one amalgam filling can kill off an entire lake of fish - I don't know the exact numbers but there is a study somewhere on my computer that calculates precisely how much mercury it takes to kill all the fish of a lake of a certain volume). The point is there is A LOT of research being done on man produced heavy metals and the enviroment, on man produced heavy metals and the effects on animals, etc...........but when it comes to heavy metals and the effect on people,research is more behind because it is politically, socially and economically charged). > > Also, the problem with cause and effect type of studies is that they assume that the human body is mechanical and follows the mechanistic rules, which it often does not. Even the medical model of isolating organs and studying x organ and z effect on x organ can only take your knowledge so far,because it is beyond human knowledge to know exactly how the human body works holistically, how the effects of z, while not direct on organ y, can still be found but not measured in a quantitative manner, that doesn't mean there aren't any effects. > > It is rather ridiculous to study organs in isolation with each other, just as it is ridiculous to think that human beings are immune to the effects of the man produced toxins in the enviroment, as if we are somehow magically isolated from our environment. > > But that is the limit of science so why put down science? It is not infallible precisely because it is limited by human knowedge and interpretation, which is finite. I don't think science can provide us with all the answers but I don't expect it to and I have worked with enough scientists when I was doing my undergrad in biochem (before I switched to joint english and biology) to know that most scientists also see science as providing us with only limited knowledge. There is much more we don't know and science often just gives us more questions rather than providing us with straight forward answers. > > Of course that doesn't stop the medical community and the pharmaceutical companies from using the rhetoric of science to assert their authority. Most pharmaceutical funded studies are not done nearly long enough, and do not answer nearly enough questions to satisfy questions of safety, hence why so many drugs are put on the market only to be later recalled. > > So really, I just don't think your cause and effect arguement applies, because for it to apply we would have to be mechanical beings rather than the complex beings that we are. > > Yes, of course it is difficult to prove scientifically just what effects are caused by certain toxins - because that entails isolating all the other variables, which just doesn't happen in the natural world. Life does not exist in a vaccuum as it does in a science lab. > > That doesn't mean these links are not there. If you take science to be the ultimate truth, then you are putting man into the position of being all knowing, which is just simply ridiculous. We are merely trying to grasp our extremly complex world and we are not even close to understanding just how this world, or how we exactly function in harmony with other animals and our environment. > > What really irks me about psychiatrists is that they would rather just say, such and such a disease or behaviour (i.e. scizophrenia) happens, but we don't know why, we just know that x drug seems to help, and the benefits outweigh the side effects, without ever getting to the root cause. > > So I really wonder, why are doctors and psychiatrists SO quick to dismiss environmental effects, in particular toxins? > > How is it that we can be immune (yet not animals) to the effects of these toxins, that are present in a greater concentration than ever in human history due to the scientific/technological revolution? > > Is it precisely because the question is so complex that doctors would rather not bother? > > Is it precisely because this would entail in excepting that our science,and hence understanding of our world, even our man-made world is limited and beyond our abilty/knowledge to comprehend? > > I can certainly understand that it IS just easier to give someone a pill and call it a day without getting at the root cause. > > I can certainly understand that it is far simpler to not pose these questions, for to pose these questions is to undermine our own authority over the world and over our own existance. > > But none the less, there are many scientists world wide who are still trying to answer these questions, so good for them. > > I am personally of the opinon that it is silly that we need scientists to valid common sense observations (if x and y toxin are having r and s effects on other mammals, how much of a stretch is it that they would have SOME (not necessarily the same) effect on humans?). > > I also wouldn't hold my breath in having science come up with the answers as to how do we treat autism, and do vaccines contribute to autism? If I had an autistic child and my choice was to wait until science " proved " that my child could be helped by using a very safe sulfer compound, such as DMSA, I wouldn't wait for those answers from the scientific community, my child would not have that much time. That there are hundreds of children who have been helped by DMSA for lead poisoning and other heavy metal poisoning (from vaccines or otherwise) is indication enough that you have to wonder why the government sponcered scientists haven't been investigating these questions. It is much easier to just say these parents and scientists who do support them (such as Boyd Haley, Andy Cutler, etc) are quacks than to examine an area of science/medicine that is completely vested econmically and politically. > > Why would I give so much power (such as the fate over my child's ultimate health) to the government or to doctors who with or without their knowledge, have such a political and economical gain in an area such as vaccinations? (To their credit, most doctors aren't aware that vaccines are politically and economically charged - they just simply see it as good medicine and don't question it). > > So back to the question of lead and psychiatric symptoms. Luckily, lead is one of the most studied toxins, precisely because it is the least politically and economically charged (unlike mercury, which is found in amalgam fillings and was used as an ingredient in many vaccines until recently). Because lead contamination is generally attributed to things like toys from china, old paint, and car exhaust, it is much safer to do research on lead, than it would be to do research into mercury, where you would have special interest groups with lots of lobbying power and very powerful attornies on their side. > > So here is one site that cites a study where lead is linked to schizophrenia: > > http://encyclopedia.stateuniversity.com/pages/13252/lead- poisoning.html > > " However, a s Hopkins report by Tomas Guilarte stated " It has been known for some time that lead is a potent inhibitor of the NMDA receptor, a protein known to play an important role in brain development and cognition. In this study we demonstrate that lead exposure decreased the amount of NMDA receptor gene and protein in a part of the brain called the hippocampus. " They found that children who had been exposed to high levels of lead in the womb were more than twice as likely to go on to develop schizophrenia. " > > Incidently, the same article points to the links of siezures and lead poisoning: " The symptoms of lead poisoning include neurological problems, such as reduced IQ, nausea, abdominal pain, irritability, insomnia, excess lethargy or hyperactivity, headache and, in extreme cases, seizure and coma. " > > Here is an article that sites scientists who have been doing research on lead and violent behaviour: http://articles.latimes.com/2008/may/28/science/sci-lead28 > > " In the first of the new studies, environmental health research Kim N. Dietrich of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine studied 250 of the original group, correlating their lead levels with adult criminal arrest records from Hamilton County, Ohio. > They found that 55% of the subjects (63% of males) had been arrested, and that the average was five arrests between the ages of 18 and 24. > The higher the blood lead level at any time in childhood, the greater the likelihood of arrests. " The strongest association was with violent criminal activity – murder, rape domestic violence, assault, robbery and possession of weapons, " Dietrich said. " > > Another article here explores the relationship between lead poisoning and antisocial behavior: > > http://www.calisafe.org/_disc1/00000032.htm " University of Pittsburgh researcher Dr. Herbert Needleman, professor of child psychiatry and pediatrics, examined the bone lead levels of 216 youths convicted in a juvenile court and 201 non- delinquent controls from high schools in Pittsburgh. " Of all the causes of juvenile delinquency, lead exposure is perhaps the most preventable, " said Needleman. " These results should be a call to action for legislators to protect our children by requiring landlords to not simply disclose known instances of lead paint in their properties, but to remove it. " These reports join a growing body of evidence linking lead to health, cognitive and behavioral problems in children. In the U.S., almost a million children under the age of six suffer from lead poisoning. " > > " Lead exposure can cause permanent damage to the brain and other organs. Research shows that children with elevated blood lead levels are seven times more likely to drop out of school and twice as likely to lose a few years in language acquisition. Prior studies by Needleman linking lead exposure to lower IQ scores, short attention spans and poor language skills helped prompt nationwide government bans on lead from paint, gasoline and food and beverage cans. But there are still a number of ways in which children, and adults, may be exposed to lead. Most children who suffer from lead poisoning are exposed to invisible lead dust that is released when older paint is peeling, damaged or disturbed, or by eating chips of lead paint. Drinking water that comes from lead pipes or lead soldered fittings can expose children to lead, as can breathing air contaminated by the lead smelting, refining and manufacturing industries " > > This link discusses an interesting article on how an enriching environment can protect the brain against lead exposure, which would explain again, why social-economic status plays a role in environmental toxin poisoning and related behavioural problems http://www.scienceblog.com/community/older/2001/D/200114426.html > > (Another example that throws off any cause and effect arguments - when you have to study a topic such as heavy metal poisoning from an interdisciplinary approach - economic, political, social, biological, biochemical, medical, enviromental, any kind of cause and effect relationships become just mere threads in a complex web). > > Here is just one mere example of how incredibly limited science is to understanding these complex relationships in biological beings: > > " Although lead is the most studied of hundreds of known or suspected neurotoxic air pollutants, other heavy metals, pesticides, and organic solvents also cause neurobehavioral dysfunction. Expanded research in behavioral neurotoxicology is urgently needed. Changes in mood, cognition, and behavior are endpoints that need to be evaluated in addition to cancer rates or mortality data and may be more common. In various studies, increased levels of air pollutants are accompanied by increased psychiatric emergency calls and hospital admissions, behavior changes, and a lessened sense of well-being. Irritating odors and cigarette smoke have been found to increase aggressive behavior, and to decrease helping behavior and altruism, leading to a degradation of social interaction. " http://www.nutramed.com/environment/carschemicals.htm " > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.