Thursday, February 3, 2011

Children With Autism Have Mitochondrial Dysfunction, Study Finds

"For instance, many environmental stressors can cause mitochondrial damage. Depending on when a child was exposed, maternally or neonatally, and how severe that exposure was, it might explain the range of the symptoms of autism."


THANK YOU!

FINALLY, research that proves a strong relationship between children with autism and mitochondrial dysfunction. Remember my post months back with the then director of the CDC Julie Gerberding, talking about the girl who won her case in court over a vaccine injury. She outlined this very phenomenon and claimed that it was very rare... about 1 in 50.

When you're talking autism numbers, 1 in 50 isn't exactly rare.

I can't believe I missed this back in November.


But I will stress here that you please educate yourselves about vaccines. I know my child's autism was not caused by a vaccine... his symptoms showed up at about 11 months after he had a weird virus that left him with a tiny petechiae like rash. As we can tell, in our not so professional opinion, there may have been a relationship between the virus and his regressive autism. The virus may have been the stressor. Vaccines play an important role in controlling disease outbreaks and protect our children from serious illnesses that can lead to complications and even death.

All that being said, I still believe (again, in my not so professional opinion, and the opinion of the director of the CDC) the stressor in a child with mitochondrial dysfunction could be a vaccine as it creates a immune type response within the body much like the actual virus would. I haven't seen any research that suggests vaccines themselves are dangerous.

I do, however, want to point out that the research I have seen also does not show older children or adults suddenly presenting with regressive autism. The rate of autism in children with or without vaccination in studies done outside of Andrew Wakefield's tainted research suggest there is no difference in rate of occurrence between the groups.

So what do you think? Knowing the age bracket of regression, I'd think that if a child is predisposed to this, they'd probably encounter a stressor that would trigger a neurological decline at one point or another, regardless of whether or not they were vaccinated. Or maybe their bodies are at a point in their development after a certain age that keeps them from reacting in that way. But, as you will read, mitochondrial dysfunction can be associated with many other more typical adult disorders including schizophrenia, Alzheimers disease, bipolar, and Parkinson's disease.

I guess I feel that ultimately, if this is indeed true, I'm not sure I could outrun this. Even if I chose not to vaccinate, the way I understand it, if my child has mitochondrial dysfunction, any number of things could trigger a decline.

Anyway, the article is most interesting, and supports what I've been focusing on for over a year now. I am so thrilled that there is now strong evidence that confirms this.




ScienceDaily (Nov. 30, 2010) — Children with autism are far more likely to have deficits in their ability to produce cellular energy than are typically developing children, a new study by researchers at UC Davis has found. The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), found that cumulative damage and oxidative stress in mitochondria, the cell's energy producer, could influence both the onset and severity of autism, suggesting a strong link between autism and mitochondrial defects.

After the heart, the brain is the most voracious consumer of energy in the body. The authors propose that deficiencies in the ability to fuel brain neurons might lead to some of the cognitive impairments associated with autism. Mitochondria are the primary source of energy production in cells and carry their own set of genetic instructions, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), to carry out aerobic respiration. Dysfunction in mitochondria already is associated with a number of other neurological conditions, including Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

"Children with mitochondrial diseases may present exercise intolerance, seizures and cognitive decline, among other conditions. Some will manifest disease symptoms and some will appear as sporadic cases," said Cecilia Giulivi, the study's lead author and professor in the Department of Molecular Biosciences in the School of Veterinary Medicine at UC Davis. "Many of these characteristics are shared by children with autism."
The researchers stress that these new findings, which may help physicians provide early diagnoses, do not identify the cause or the effects of autism, which affects as many as 1 in every 110 children in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While previous studies have revealed hints of a connection between autism and mitochondrial dysfunction, these reports have been either anecdotal or involved tissues that might not be representative of neural metabolism.

"It is remarkable that evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction and changes in mitochondrial DNA were detected in the blood of these young children with autism," said Geraldine Dawson, chief science officer of Autism Speaks, which provided funding for the study. "One of the challenges has been that it has been difficult to diagnose mitochondrial dysfunction because it usually requires a muscle biopsy. If we could screen for these metabolic problems with a blood test, it would be a big step forward."

For the study, Giulivi and her colleagues recruited 10 autistic children aged 2 to 5, and 10 age-matched typically developing children from similar backgrounds. The children were randomly selected from Northern California subjects who previously had participated in the 1,600-participant Childhood Autism Risk from Genetics and the Environment (CHARGE) Study and who also consented to return for a subsequent study known as CHARGE-BACK, conducted by the UC Davis Center for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention.

The children with autism met stringent diagnostic criteria for autism as defined by the two most widely used and rigorous assessment tools. Though the total number of children studied was small, it is generally representative of the much larger CHARGE cohort, and that increases the significance of the study results, the authors said.

The researchers obtained blood samples from each child and analyzed the metabolic pathways of mitochondria in immune cells called lymphocytes. Previous studies sampled mitochondria obtained from muscle, but the mitochondrial dysfunction sometimes is not expressed in muscle. Muscle cells can generate much of their energy through anaerobic glycolysis, which does not involve mitochondria. By contrast, lymphocytes, and to a greater extent brain neurons, rely more heavily on the aerobic respiration conducted by mitochondria.

The researchers found that mitochondria from children with autism consumed far less oxygen than mitochondria from the group of control children, a sign of lowered mitochondrial activity. For example, the oxygen consumption of one critical mitochondrial enzyme complex, NADH oxidase, in autistic children was only a third of that found in control children.

"A 66 percent decrease is significant," Giulivi said. "When these levels are lower, you have less capability to produce ATP (adenosine triphosphate) to pay for cellular work. Even if this decrease is considered moderate, deficits in mitochondrial energy output do not have to be dismissed, for they could be exacerbated or evidenced during the perinatal period but appear subclinical in the adult years."

Reduced mitochondrial enzyme function proved widespread among the autistic children. Eighty percent had lowered activity in NADH oxidase than did controls, while 60 percent, 40 percent and 30 percent had low activity in succinate oxidase, ATPase and cytochrome c oxidase, respectively. The researchers went on to isolate the origins of these defects by assessing the activity of each of the five enzyme complexes involved in mitochondrial respiration. Complex I was the site of the most common deficiency, found in 60 percent of autistic subjects, and occurred five out of six times in combination with Complex V. Other children had problems in Complexes III and IV.
Levels of pyruvate, the raw material mitochondria transform into cellular energy, also were elevated in the blood plasma of autistic children. This suggests the mitochondria of children with autism are unable to process pyruvate fast enough to keep up with the demand for energy, pointing to a novel deficiency at the level of an enzyme named pyruvate dehydrogenase.

Mitochondria also are the main intracellular source of oxygen free radicals. Free radicals are very reactive species that can harm cellular structures, including DNA. Cells are able to repair typical levels of such oxidative damage. Giulivi and her colleagues found that hydrogen peroxide levels in autistic children were twice as high as in normal children. As a result, the cells of children with autism were exposed to higher oxidative stress.

Mitochondria often respond to oxidative stress by making extra copies of their own DNA. The strategy helps ensure that some normal genes are present even if others have been damaged by oxidation. The researchers found higher mtDNA copy numbers in the lymphocytes of half of the children with autism. These children carried equally high numbers of mtDNA sets in their granulocytes, another type of immune cell, demonstrating that these effects were not limited to a specific cell type. Two of the five children also had deletions in their mtDNA genes, whereas none of the control children showed deletions.

Taken together, the various abnormalities, defects and levels of malfunction measured in the mitochondria of autistic children imply that oxidative stress in these organelles could be influencing autism's onset.

"The various dysfunctions we measured are probably even more extreme in brain cells, which rely exclusively on mitochondria for energy," said Isaac Pessah, director of the Center for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention, a UC Davis MIND Institute researcher and professor of molecular biosciences at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.

Giulivi cautions that these findings do not amount to establishing a cause for autism.
"We took a snapshot of the mitochondrial dysfunction when the children were 2-to-5 years old. Whether this happened before they were born or after, this study can't tell us," she said. "However, the research furthers the understanding of autism on several fronts and may, if replicated, be used to help physicians diagnose the problem earlier."

"Pediatricians need to be aware of this issue so that they can ask the right questions to determine whether children with autism have vision or hearing problems or myopathies," Giulivi said. Exercise intolerance in the form of muscle cramps during intensive physical activity is one of the characteristics of mitochondrial myopathies.

The chemical fingerprints of mitochondrial dysfunction also may hold potential as a diagnostic tool. Giulivi and colleagues are now examining the mitochondrial DNA of their subjects more closely to pinpoint more precise differences between autistic and non-autistic children.
"If we find some kind of blood marker that is consistent with and unique to children with autism, maybe we can change the way we diagnose this difficult-to-assess condition," she said.
The study also helps refine the search for autism's origins.

"The real challenge now is to try and understand the role of mitochondrial dysfunction in children with autism," Pessah said. "For instance, many environmental stressors can cause mitochondrial damage. Depending on when a child was exposed, maternally or neonatally, and how severe that exposure was, it might explain the range of the symptoms of autism."
"This important exploratory research addresses in a rigorous way an emerging hypothesis about potential mitochondrial dysfunction and autism," said Cindy Lawler, program director at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), which provided funding for the study. "Additional research in this area could ultimately lead to prevention or intervention efforts for this serious developmental disorder."

Other study authors include Yi-Fan Zhang, Alicja Omanska-Klusek, Catherine Ross-Inta, Sarah Wong, Irva Hertz-Picciotto and Flora Tassone of UC Davis.

Funding for the study was provided by a UC Davis MIND Institute Pilot Research Grant, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Autism Speaks, including an Environmental Innovator Award from Autism Speaks.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101130161521.htm

3 comments:

  1. Were the children tested injected with vaccines before diagnosing their autism? How can you be sure the vaccine didn't trigger the mitcondrial dysfunction?

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  2. Well, that's really the point of this. What they're saying is that you can be genetically predisposed to having mitochondrial dysfunction and then the vaccine or other stressor causes a chain of events that activates it, whether it be Autism, Alzheimers, or whatever it presents itself to be.

    So according to the director of the CDC, the child who won the lawsuit had an "undiagnosed" underlying mitochondrial dysfunction and yes, she claims the vaccine triggered it.

    I think the general medical community still sees this as a new concept and so we'll have to wait until more studies are done to see what they actually come up with, but yes, the vaccine could trigger it.

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  3. Sounds crazy but we put our daughter on Kangen Water. It is highly antioxidant, alkaline water which is also reduced in molecular size 6-8 times smaller than regular water so it hydrates and flushes (cellular detox) at the cellular level much better.
    Our only regret is the 3 months time spent reading on it b4 allowing her to drink it.
    She has responded so well with both her Autism and Epi. The Kangen Water helps neutralize oxidative stress and free radicals with its alkalinity and antioxidants.
    Many Autistic chidren don't drink enough water to begin with. Hydration is critical for carrying nutrients and enabling the organs to produce and transport hormones, enzymes etc to the brain. The brain is over 80% water. Water must not be overlooked for this reason.The Ionization process also increases the blood oxygen content. Aina.pat@gmail.com for more info

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