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Editor,
The Journal of Integrative Medicine
Formerly, Associate Professor of Pathology (adj.), College
of Physicians
and Surgeons of Columbia University, NY
Formerly, President of Staff and Chief Pathologist,
Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck, NJ
Fellow, Royal
College of Surgeons of England -
Diplomate,
American Board of Anatomic and Clinical Pathology
Diplomate, American Boards of Environmental Medicine
Past President Capital University of Integrative
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THE HURT CHILDREN OF A HURT EARTH
The ADHD-Autism-Oxygen Connection
Majid Ali, M.D.
The
central tragedy in the spreading pandemic of children's
developmental problems is: Reason is subordinated to
belief. Most psychologists in the "industry" claim they
can understand the mind without understanding the body.
They believe their job is to find the right diagnostic
label. Psychiatrists believe their responsibility ends
with prescriptions of what they consider to be the
appropriate mind-altering drugs. Both groups are
uninterested in the observable phenomena concerning the
causative influences of toxic environment, toxic foods,
and toxic thoughts. Those who pollute or otherwise
destroy human habitat consider the state of denial among
psychologists and psychiatrists convenient and
supportive of their profitability goals. It shifts the
focus to the "ADHD-autism mysteries" and away
from the real observable and demonstrable phenomena
concerning the impact of toxicities of the environments,
foods, and chronic anger on the energetic,
developmental, and differentiative processes in
children. Specifically, the pandemic of children's
developmental disorders includes
Attention-Deficit-Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD),
obssessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), autism, Asperger's
syndrome, Tourette's syndrome, and related learning and
behavioral difficulties.
Molecular biology is the voice of reason in the care of
children with atypical neurodevelopmental states (ANS);
psychiatry, its belief system. Reason is the faculty of
observing natural phenomena and integrating new
observations into the existing body of informationCthe
natural order of thingsCto
advance knowledge and understanding. Belief, by
contrast, is one person's opinion imprinted permanently
on another persons' awarenessCa
file downloaded on to someone's "hard drive of
understanding" while the delete key is deleted. The
subject is stuck with that opinion and remains
impervious to observations that challenge the belief.
The
Larger-Head-Smaller-Brain ScenarioCInitial
Brain Hypertrophy and Delayed Brain Atrophy
Some years ago
I considered the vast array of seemingly disparate facts
of ANS (atypical neurodevelopmental states) and wondered
if there were some common causative mechanisms
underlying the broad clinical spectrum.1
Could I connect the dots of the ANS spectrum, looking
through the prism of oxygen signalingCa
preoccupation which has served me well in my earlier
quarrels with paradoxes of biologyCand
develop a unifying model? I then imagined a
larger-head-smaller-brain scenario. I imagined the
essential nature of ANS to be a sequence of initial
brain hypertrophy and delayed brain atrophy. Initial
hypertrophy is caused by overstimulation, whereas the
delayed atrophy represents a state of cellular toxicity
and burn-out. In this scenario, hypertrophy is induced
by hyperexcitability caused by incremental stimulation
of the developing brain in the wombCby
prenatal exposure to maternal environmental,
nutritional, and stress-related factors. Many of those
stressors continue after birth. Some regions of the
brain would be expected to respond to such
overstimulation by accelerated development and increased
tissue mass. Considering the limited ability of the
brain tissue to overdevelop and cope with incremental
demands, the initial period of hypertrophy would be
expected to be followed by delayed brain atrophyCtherefore
the larger-head-smaller-brain scenario.
The ANS spectrum covers an enormous range of
symptom-complexes, including the following: ADHD
(attention deficit hyperactivity disorder), OCD
(obsessive-compulsive disorder), autism, the Asperger's
syndrome, the Tourette's syndrome, tics, learning
disorders, hyperkinetic child syndrome, expressive
language disorder, phonological disorder,
pandevelopmental disorder, oppositional defiant
disorder, and the older term of minimal brain disease.2-8
The oxygen view of ANS presented here has three
strengths: (1) It sidesteps the clutter of diagnostic
labels that hide much and reveal nothing about the
nature of clinical problems; (2) it acknowledges the
increasing number of constellations of genetic
mutations associated with ANS symptom-complexes and
recognizes that there are no effective therapies for any
of them at this time; and (3) It focuses on the
molecular mechanisms that cause a child's suffering and
offers a road map for effectively addressing all
relevant issues for superior clinical results.
An Illustrative Case
Study
October 26, 2006: A
four-year-old child presented with the diagnosis of
autism, hyperactivity, leg cramps, rashes, and fits of
anger and biting. His vocabulary was limited to three
words: mama, papa, Allah. His father provided additional
information with the following words: "He is a smart
man. He knows how to avoid injury. He will check the hot
and cold water taps well so he doesn't get hurt. With
visitors, he will first not look at them, then he
becomes friendly. But he does bite. Interacts with
younger sister more than with us. He will bite whether
angry or happy. He will pull at the weak fifth finger
rather than the strong thumb and index fingers. After
getting angry and biting, he becomes quiet and tries to
make friends with us. Sometimes he likes dark and turns
the lights off and then will turn them on again.
Sleep
very well. Tylenol helps leg cramps. He used to sing
then he stopped after the age of 3 years. He used to
catch melodies. Now he does not."
Lab evaluation: Mild
anemia. High levels of IgE antibodies with specificity
for Mucor, Penicillium, Fusarium,
Candida, and
Alternaria species. Increased urinary excretion of
arabinoise, oxalate, subseric acid.
Treatment plan:
Elimination of
sugar, dairy, and wheat. Robust
antifungal plan with Nystatin and phytofactors. Sulfur
antioxidants, multivitamin and multimineral protocols,
and twice weekly subcutaneous hydroxocobalamin (1,000
mcg) injections.
December 6, 2006: Mother's
words: "90% less biting, crying reduced from daily to
weekly, leg cramps have cleared up. Eye contact has
improved at school. They want a five second contact, he
now has four second contact. His memory is coming back,
he is repeating some old words. Makes a lot of sounds
now.
Constipation cleared up with castor liver packs."
January 24, 2007: Parents.
words: "Becoming calmer, better non-verbal communication
with parents. No biting. Not breaking his fingers at all
times. Overall 10% calmer since the last visit. We think
it is due to the castor liver packs. Plays with business
cards. Overall right leg cramping is less. Still needs
paper in the mouth all the time. Said arecto
which means a little more and attakee which means
what is this? No areas of lost brain function. His brain
is developing for naughty things. Ear infections caused
more tensing. When school is out, he becomes more tense.
Eye contact almost normal. Not putting things in his
mouth. Teachers report continued progress. Brain
progress little, if any."
1% in 1971, 5.96% in
1987, 11.66 % in 2006
The planet Earth is
febrile now. The spreading pandemics of ADHD and autism
are two of the disturbing faces of that febrile
condition. In 1988, the Journal of the American
Medical Association published data concerning the
use of drugs for treating hyperactivity/inattentiveness
among students.9 Consider the following quote
from that report: "The results reveal a consistent
doubling of the rate of medication treatment for
hyperactive/inattentive students every four to seven
years such that in 1987, 5.96% of all public
elementary school students were receiving such
treatment." (Italics added). Ten years later, the Fall
2006 Preliminary Ethnic Survey Report Pub. No. 346 of
the Los Angeles Unified School District revealed that
11.66% of children in the district were in special
education programs (Table 1).10 According to
the Center for Disease Control, the prevalence of
autism varies significantly from region to region in the
United States. New Jersey has the distinction of have
the highest prevalence rate, more than ten percent.11
Note that the ten percent rate refers only to one face
of ANS (autism). 11 A recent report on
trends of diagnosed psychiatric disorders between 1989
and 2000, Psychiatric Service published by the
American Psychiatric Association included the following
data concerning hospital discharge increases between
1989 and 2000: (1) affective disorder, 138 percent; (2)
autism and ADHD, quadrupled over the course of the
study; and (3) most common mental disorders, 39 percent.12
|
Table 1.
Profile of Special Education in the the Los
Angeles Unified School District: |
|
Total K‑12
Preliminary Enrollment |
708,365 |
|
Total Number of
Special Education |
82,650
|
|
Percentage of
children in special education program |
11.66% |
In
the late 1980s, I recognized the following four problems
with the prevailing classification of atypical
neurodevelopmental states (ANS) of children:
1. A wide overlap between the
symptom-complexes of children with
ANS (ADHD, autism,
Tourette's syndrome, and others) severely limits their clinical value;
2. None of the
diagnostic labels yield any insights into the energetic-molecular nature
of a child's suffering;
3. The intensity of suffering
caused by ANS varies markedly under different environmental, nutritional, and
stress conditions, indicating the causative influences of those factors;
4. Diagnostic labels
are deceptively used as valid scientific justification for giving psychotropic
drugs with serious adverse effects.
Twenty years
later, I continue to be profoundly dismayed when I
witness the havoc wreaked upon tormented children with
psychotropic drugs. I am troubled when I observe the
struggle of hapless parents in their fight against
school psychologists, child neurologists, and
pediatriciansCall
experts in choosing diagnostic labels, but none
knowledgeable about crucial issues of toxic
environments, toxic foods, and toxic thoughts. Often I
think the U.S. Congress ought to pass a law for children
banning the use of psychotropic drugs by doctors who do
not have documented proficiency in molecular biology of
nutrition and environment.
The Dysox Model
In 1999, I
proposed the dysox model of ANS (atypical
neurodevelopmental states) in order to dispense with
frivolous diagnostic labels, which reveal nothing and
hide everything.1 I wanted to sharply focus
on the real issues of toxicities of environment, foods,
and thoughts. I coined the pneumonic ShaloatCtaking
the first letters of
the words spectrum,
hyperactivity, ADD, learning, OCD, autism, and
TouretteCto
refer to the
broad spectrum of ANS,
including the
Asperger's syndrome,
hyperkinetic child syndrome, expressive language
disorder, phonological disorder, pandevelopmental
disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, and the older
term of minimal brain disease.
Unburdened by useless diagnostic labels, the term
Shaloat allowed me to concentrate on the pertinent
biologic issues to improve clinical results.
Specifically, I observed biochemical evidence of
acidosis,
oxidosis, clotting-unclotting dysequilibrium,
and abnormal Krebs cycle biochemistry in most children
in the ANS spectrum. The dysox model allowed me to focus
on these molecular derangements, regardless of the
diagnostic rubric used for the children.
The Expanding-Shrinking
Brain Scenario
Autistic children often have large heads. In general,
the head circumference of children with ANS is larger
than control subject. In 1996, in a study conducted at
the Child and Family Guidance Clinic, Swindon, U.K,
anthropometric measures of consecutive clinic attenders
with pervasive developmental disorder (PDD) and related
psychiatric or language disorders were analyzed.13
The investigators combined their data with those
obtained from two schools for language disordered
children. Based on the existing percentile charts, about
one‑third of children with PDD had macrocephaly, a rate
significantly higher than in children with language
disorder alone.
Advances in brain imaging technology make it
possible to precisely map out brain anatomy and
functionalities. A large body of data concerning the
structural and functional findings in children in the
ANS spectrum has been published in recent years.14-16
In such data, especially in information gained with the
functional MRIs, I recognize a pattern of an
"expanding-shrinking-brain" state. Specifically, two
clear patterns of abnormalities in the morphologic and
functional aspects of the brain of children with ANS
are: (1) more rapid development of some regions of the
brain in the early years;14 and (2) reduced
total brain volume, decreased volume throughout the
cerebral cortex, and thinning of the outer grey matter
regions in the later years.15 What might be
the molecular basis of such phenomena? I propose the
following hypothesis. The essential nature of ANS is a
state of hyperexcitability and overdevelopment induced
by incremental stimulation of the developing prenatal
brain by maternal environmental, nutritional, and
stress-related factors. In most instances, the antenatal
stressors continue in the postnatal life of the infant,
albeit to lesser degrees. Some regions of the brain
respond to such overstimulation by accelerated
development and increased mass in the early years.
However, the ability of the brain tissue to enlarge to
cope with incremental demands is limited. An initial
period of hypertrophy is followed by delayed atrophy.
Unrelenting stressors eventually cause decompensation,
and ongoing neuronal injury results in loss of brain
substance.
In autism, overstimulation results in clinically
observed social discomfort, difficulty with eye contact,
and avoidance. The overstimulated and sensitized brain
learns to reduce exposure to common stimuli, which are
well tolerated by other children. This, of course, is
the hallmark clinical pattern of the disorder. In ADHD,
by contrast, overstimulation leads to hyperactivity,
impulsiveness, and distractibility in early stages.
Again, continued overstimulation eventually causes a
state of burn-out and cerebral atrophy. Psychotropic
drugs, side-stepping the issues of their real need,
further fan the fires of neuronal excitability, injure
the brain cells, and cause yet more brain atrophy.
Important issues in the
context of intrauterine overstimulation of the
developing fetus are maternal toxins, especially those
in the following categories: (1) mycotoxin overload
(secondary to overgrowth of yeast species in the
bowel
and exposure in home and work environment); (2)
preservatives and pesticides in foods; (3) environmental
pollutants; (4) excess cortisol due to poor sleep; (5)
hyperadrenergic state caused by chronic stress; and (6)
sugar, caffeine, and antibiotic abuse. Among the
important sources of overstimulation after birth
include: (1) continued exposure to maternal toxins
through lactation; (2) mycotoxins related to thrush;
(3) cow milk and lactate intolerances; (4) repeated
immunologic overstimulation resulting from multiple
vaccinations; and (5) environmental toxins in the home
environment. Below, I include an illustrative case
study:
he parents of a
two-year-old girl consulted me when they noticed that
their child was "regressing." She was born full term and
weighed 7.2 pounds. There was no history of intestinal
colic or eczema. She developed normally, was an active
playful child, learned new words quickly, and responded
well to names and instruction. She could count up to ten
About three months prior to the time of consultation,
she received MMR vaccine. Within several days, the
parents noticed that she "started spacing out and losing
focus....she began to walk with right foot folded
somewhat, like a ballerina." She stopped responding to
her name and instruction, and "kept holding her ears."
She had been considered to be a very visual child.
After vaccination, the parents thought she had "lost
some visual intensity." Her stools became dark and
"very smelly." At times she became very restless and
hyperactive.
Biochemically, the clinical features of ANS vary in
their intensity with changing conditions of acidosis,
oxidosis, clotting-unclotting dysequilibrium, and
deranged Krebs cycle biochemistry. In support of this
hypothesis, direct and indirect lines of evidence can be
marshaled in the following categories: (1) worsening
nutritional deficits arising from consumption of foods
grown with chemicals and genetically modified crops; (2)
incremental global chemicalization with deepening
environmental toxicities; (3) increasing frequency of
oxyradical-induced mutations involving oxygen-driven
cellular developmental, differentiative, and detox
pathways; (4) existence of acidosis, oxidosis, and
clotting-unclotting dysequilibrium in children in the
ANS spectrum; and (5) commonality of symptom-complexes
between Shaloat children and adults with disorders
characterized by acidosis, oxidosis, and
clotting-un-clotting dysequilibrium, such as chronic
fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, persistent fatigue after
chemotherapy and immunosuppressive therapies.
Redox Dysregulation And
Dysox in Autism
Direct biochemical evidence for redox dysregulation
in autism is drawn from significantly reduced activities
of various redox-restorative factors in autistic
children compared with control children. Specifically,
decreased amounts or activities of the following
strongly support the oxidative hypothesis of autism:
homocysteine (7% less), cysteine (22% less), total GSH
(31%), free GSH (30% less), inactive glutathione (34%
less), glutathione ratio expressed as unitless (tGSH/GSSG,
40% less), and free GSH/GSSG (30% less).16
Direct evidence for impairment of the Krebs cycle
biochemistry caused by mycotoxins and other toxicants
can be established in many cases of autism by
documenting increased urinary excretion of Krebs cycle
metabolites. I cite one case here to illustrate the
point. The patient, a 4-year-old autistic child,
presented with symptoms and signs of allergy. Urinary
excretion of several organic acids (expressed in mmol/mol
creatinine) were increased. High serum concentrations of
IgE antibodies with specificity for Mucor, Fusarium,
Aspergillus, Penicillium, Candida, Alternaria, and
Cladosporium species were present. He was treated
with robust nutritional, detoxification, and anti-fungal
therapies. At the follow-up visit, the mother reported
that the child began to "understand language" and
"awkwardly utter a few incomplete words." Urinary
excretion of mycotoxins and Krebs metabolites were
measured again and are compared with pretreatment values
(Table 2).
|
Table 2. Effect of Nutritional and Anti-Fungal
Therapies on Urinary Excretion of Organic Acids
In A 4-Year-Old Autistic Child* |
|
Name |
Pre-treatment |
Posttreatment
(Reference Range) |
|
Tartaric acid |
423 |
32 (0-16) |
|
Arabinose |
427 |
24 (0-115) |
|
Furan-2,5-dicarboxylic acid |
155 |
7 (0-50) |
|
Furancarbonylglycine acid |
88 |
0 (0-60) |
|
5-hydroxymethyl-2-furoic acid |
421 |
42 (0-80) |
|
3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaric acid |
259 |
11 (0-36) |
|
Lactic acid |
98 |
61 (0-100) |
|
Pyruvic acid |
3.6 |
2.6 (0-50) |
*Note that the shifts in lactic and pyruvic acids in the
posttreatment values occurred in the opposite
directions.
Oxyradicals induce
deletion mutations in mammalian cells.17 For
example, oxidizing agentsChydrogen
peroxide, ozone, potassium superoxide, and othersChave
documented mutagenic effects. Similarly, oxyradical‑producing
chemicalsCbleomycin
(a chemotherapy agent), streptonigrin and othersCcause
mutations with different frequencies.
Angry ADHD-Autism GenesCGetting
Angrier by the Decade
The body of
information concerning gene mutations associated with
ATS is growing rapidly. Such mutations have been
recognized in chromosomes 5, 6, 16, and 17.18-21
Other pertinent mutations are found in individuals with:
(1) the fragile X syndrome; (2) extra 21st chromosome;
(3) the microdeletion syndrome 16p11.2; (4) the 7q11.23
syndrome; (5) the 22q1 mutation; (6) mutation of gene
that codes for synaptosomal‑associated protein 25
(SNAP‑25); (7) seven‑repeat allele of dopamine receptor
(DRD4 7R); and (8) photoreceptor‑specific gene at the
retinitis pigmentosa (RP) locus, which is modulated by
retinal oxygen levels in vivo.22
The search for the genetic basis of various
symptom-complexes of ANS has also focused on nucleotide
sequences involved with neurotransmitters, including
dopamine, serotonin, GABA, glutamate, nitric oxide (NO),
carbon monoxide (CO), and others. Notable among other
nucleotide sequences, in the present context of the ATS-oxygen
connections, are altered DNA sequences that code for
oxygen-sensitive and oxygen-responsive protein systems
of the body, which may be called oxyenzymes.
Human biology is an ever-changing kaleidoscope. All
biologic functions are intricately interconnected. It
should be self-evident that such broad phenotypic
connectedness must be established and sustained by an
equally broad genotypic connectivity. Stated simply, all
biologic functions must be regulated by constellations
of genes. That, indeed, is the case. Mutations occur in
clusters of genes to set the stage for the pathogenesis
common diseases. In view of these considerations, I
consider loud claims of genetic cures of ANS
unwarranted. I assert that when it becomes possible
to replace clusters of mutated genes, the clinical
benefits will depend on the degree to which oxygen
homeostasis can be maintained.
Ecogenemics of
Atypical Neurodevelopmental States
A number of papers published in 2007 fully support
the above perspective of genetic connectedness.23-25
In the context of ATS, for example, single‑nucleotide
polymorphisms are scattered throughout the genome, and
singular combinations of particular genes form
haplotypes involved in behavioral traits. Structural
variationsCadditions,
deletions, repeat sequences, and stretches of
"backwards" DNACare
far more common than were recognized at the end of
2006. Indeed, Science's 2007 Breakthrough of the
Year was entitled "Human Genetic Variation."25
It highlighted the complexity of genetic pathways
underlying clinical states. The genetic underpinnings of
clinical states are provided by altered functionalities
of clusters of genes, and the roles of changes in
individuals genes are limited. Specifically, the range
of possible interactions between such states and the
neurotransmitter pathways involving dopamine, serotonin
(5‑HT), and others is vast.
I propose an "ecogenomic view" of ANS that recognizes
and addresses all relevant environmental,
nutritional, and stress-related issues for superior
clinical results. Needless to point out that there are
no known gene-based therapies that hold any promise of
clinical benefits. By contrast, early intervention
programs with robust, nutritional, environmental, and
behavioral guidance often yield good clinical results.
The story of gene-disease association is never a
complete story. The detection of mutation in a
specific gene in people with a specific disease never
excludes the coexistence of other mutations. In an
earlier column on diabetes, I surveyed patterns of
diabetes epidemics in different regions of the world and
raised two questions: (1) Why did the diabetes genes
become angry?; and (2) Why are the angry diabetes genes
getting angrier by the decade? I now offer some thoughts
on the subject of genetic influences in ANS
(hyperactivity, attention deficit, autism, tics, and
related states) by asking three questions: (1) Why did
the ADHD-autism genes become angry?; (2) Why did the
genes associated with the other symptom-complexes of the
ANS spectrum become angry? and (3) Why are these angry
genes getting angrier by the decade? The simple answer:
Genes are mutating in response to the cumulative
load of toxic environment, toxic foods, and toxic
thoughts. The issues of chronic anger and mycotoxins, in
my view, are especially important in this context. In
past columns, I have marshaled extensive evidence to
support my view that the common denominator in all
mechanisms of molecular disruption and cellular
injury caused by toxicities of environment, foods, and
thoughts is oxygen dyshomeostasis and deranged oxygen
signaling.
The Influences of Toxic
Environment, Toxic Foods, and Toxic Thoughts: Three
Discoveries With Evil Consequences
The sordid story of toxic environment and corrupted food
supply began in 1840 with the German chemist, Baron
Justus von Liebig. He developed a tremendously enriching
scheme to turn complex soil biology into a chemical
formula for dirt. The soil evolved over million of
years to sustain its plants. Liebig's chemical formula
created quick spurts of growth. He found that nitrogen,
potassium, and phosphorus could speed plant growth, but
failed to foresee how it would adversely affect the
immunity of plants and the ecosystems of the soil.
Liebig is honored as the "father of the fertilizer
industry." His advice is still visible in the KPN value
(the amounts of the three elements) on the fertilizer
packages in use today. The evil in that silly notion
went unrecognized. There was no consideration then, nor
now, of the dire long-term consequences of growing food
in soil that has been depleted of all other
nutritional elements. For about 167 years, a cult of
craven and control-crazed men have engaged in a global
biology experiment to maximize their profits. The
long-term devastation of the planet Earth caused by this
experiment has gone unrecognized.
The second player in the sad story of soil depletion was
the Swiss chemist, Paul Hermann Müller, who in 1939
discovered the insecticidal properties of DDT. For that
he was awarded the 1948 Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine. The compound proved to be highly effective for
malaria control. It was also used worldwide for pest
control in homes and agriculture. DDT is highly toxic.
Imagine my surprise when on December 28, 2007, I read
the following on the Harvard University's website
(http://www.cid.harvard.edu/cidinthenews/articles/SA_Readers_Digest_
1200.html):
DDT, it turned out, was
long lasting and extremely toxic to insect nervous
systems, but virtually harmless to humans. During the
war it was sprayed on landing sites to protect invading
Allied troops, and US forces were issued DDT with which
to talc themselves for lice prevention.
Virtually harmless to
humans! Here is the reality check: In 1972, the
United States banned the agricultural use of DDT. Most
developed countries did the same within a few years.
Presently, American, European and Canadian aid agencies,
the World Bank, the United Nations and other
international agencies have urged developing countries
not to use DDT for any reason.
The third big player in this drama was Norman Ernest
Borlaug, the American plant pathologist and geneticist
who was awarded Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for his work
in genetic modifications of crops. Notwithstanding
impressive short-term gains in increasing crop yield,
the adverse long-term effects are beginning to emerge.
It is my strong sense that the delayed consequences of
genetically modified crops will prove no less dire than
turned out to be the case with the earlier discoveries
of Leibig and Muller.
Incremental global
chemicalization
In 1994, according to the American Chemical Society, the
U.S. produced 107 pounds of synthetic chemicals for
every child, man, and woman on the
planet Earth. Many chemicals have long half lives and
persist in the environment for decades. I addressed this
issue at length in my book
RDA: Rats, Drugs and
Assumptions.(1995). I cite here one study of the
relationship between pesticide toxicity and ANS.
Children of Latino agricultural workers are exposed to
higher concentrations of pesticides in fields and homes.
Pesticides are recognized disrupters of neurotransmitter
networks. These considerations led to comparative
studies of Neurobehavioral performance of preschool
children from agricultural (AG) and non‑agricultural
(Non‑AG) communities. Neurobehavioral performance of
preschool children from agricultural (AG) and
non‑agricultural (non‑AG) communities have been
investigated. The results showed detectable differences
between AG and non-AG children.26
CONCLUDING COMMENTS:
Will Every Child Have
ADHD? Will every child Develop Some Autistic Traits?
If global
chemicalization continues to deepenCchemical
production in the world is increasingCthe
febrile condition of the planet Earth can be expected to
worsen. If destruction of the human habitat proceeds at
the current rateCno
signs of relief are in sightCEarth's
fever can be expected to continue to rise. If the
corruption of the world's food supply with pesticides
and genetically modified persistsCthinking
otherwise seems wishfulCall
of the planet's children will be affected. All this
raises the obvious questions: Will every child become
hyperactive? Will every child suffer attention deficit
difficulties? Will every child develop a learning
disorder? Or some other symptom-complexes of ANS?
I find the subjects of ADHD, autism, learning disorders,
and the related forms of atypical neurodevelopmental
states both disturbing and inspiring. It is disturbing
when I consider the pandemic proportions of these
problems caused by incremental poisoning of the planet
Earth and all its children. It is inspiring when I
reflect on the heart-rending and uplifting stories of
courageous parents and triumphs of children labeled with
these disorders. I am a hard-nosed
surgeon-turned-pathologist-turned-integrative physician.
My colleagues and I have cared for a large number of
children in the ANS spectrum. So, I have some sense of
what is possible. The issue is: Can we, as a society,
begin to see the real problems. Do we have the courage
to think differently? Can we find the strength to learn,
understand, and do what is necessary? To be authentic,
understanding has to be liberating. Can we reach for
that authenticity?
References
1. Ali M. The Principles and Practice of Integrative
Medicine Volume X: Pathobiology by Micro-Ecologic
Cellular and Macro-Ecologic Tissue-Organ Systems 1999.
New York. Canary 21 Press. 1999.
2.Rapin I. Autism. N Engl J Med 1997;337:97‑104.
3. Kathryn Brown. New Attention to ADHD Genes. Science,
2003:301:160 ‑ 161.
4. Shattock P. Role of neuropeptides in autism and their
relationships with classical neurotransmitters. Brain
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