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Controversial Autism Treatment Could Get Federal Study
7-9-08
With autism steadily on the rise among America's children, more and more
parents have been searching for answers, from average moms to Jenny McCarthy.
Many parents have tried the controversial treatment known as chelation, which is
a method of precipitating metals from the body. Long used to treat lead
poisoning, chelation is more controversial for mercury, with some doctors
suggesting that it could do more harm than good. The issue has come up with
regards to mercury leaking from amalgam fillings, as well as the long-standing
argument over whether mercury in vaccines may lead to childhood autism. (Most
Western doctors think that's unlikely, though many advocates still believe).
Now, the Associated Press reports that so much pressure from parents and
advocacy groups has forced the National Institute of Mental Health to take a
closer look at chelation as a possible treatment for autism. The AP quotes a
number of prominent physicians who say they believe directly studying the issue
in children would be unethical, given the controversial nature of chelation for
mercury.
But, the feds point out that an estimated 3,000 autistic children are already
getting the treatment at any time in the United States, meaning they have a
responsibility to try to assess if the procedure is safe, and if it indeed may
have potential in addressing the disease.
Chelation has been blamed for a few child deaths (allegedly because of doctor
error), and the chelation drug DMSA is known to have side effects, including
lowering white blood counts and causing rashes. After tests on rats revealed
DMSA caused brain problems, the feds' proposed blind study of chelation in
autistic children was put on hold.
Given that development, it is unclear how health agencies will proceed with
studying chelation. But given the prevalence of the treatment and high degree of
interest in it, it stands to reason that parents need answers.
If some in the medical establishment get their way and successfully sweep the
treatment under the rug without adequate study, then it will likely drive
desperate parents to even less safe procedures, and will serve to further widen
the gap between mainstream medicine and those who believe that sector doesn't
adequately meet their needs.
For her part, Jenny McCarthy says she plants to try chelation with her autistic
son soon.
Comment:
There is some misinformation in this article. Holistic practitioners use EDTA
not DMSA which is more harmful. Children should be tested for heavy metal
toxicity to determine if chelation is necessary. If there is no mercury toxicity
than chelation will do no good because mercury is not causing the illness. Also
the longer the mercury is in the body the less chelation will help. Chelation
will not remove the damage done by mercury. Nor will chelation totally remove
mercury from the body. It will only reduce the amount. You will still have to
work for months to years to get the rest out.
I do not agree with this being determined to be a medical treatment for
Autism. It is not. It is only a treatment for heavy metal toxicity. Doctors
administering dangerous DMSA wily nily will cause more harm to an already
compromised immune system. Proper testing must be done with urine and hair to be
sure mercury is the problem.
Many parents are upset that insurance doesn't cover it. It does, if you prove
medically your child has any heavy metal toxicity. However medical proof is
blood levels only, which only last for the first 8 hours after exposure. Also
chelation does not require many treatments. It usually runs $100-200 per
treatment by chiropractors or other holistically minded doctors. I would rather
real professionals using it than 1 years grads in teaching schools.
Autism, like fibromyalgia, has many different causes other than mercury.
Autism can be caused or aggravated by mold exposure and allergy, food
sensitivities and celiac disease, other heavy metals, pesticide exposure or
other vaccines. Sometimes it is purely hereditary.
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