Another study shows vaccines do not cause autism

A team of researchers with affiliations to several institutions in the U.S., has conducted a study at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas, looking into the possibility of vaccines or the preservative thimerosal causing autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and has found no such link. In their paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team describes their study using Rhesus monkeys and what they found as a result of their work.

For several years parents and citizen groups have claimed that vaccinations (and/or a preservative used to keep them fresh) given to infants and children causes ASDs , despite the lack of evidence. Such suspicions got their start due to the onset of a disorder in many cases, shortly after a vaccination was given—most scientists believe such instances were merely coincidences. Over the same time span, many studies have been done to determine if such claims are true, and only one, by a now discredited doctor, found any validity to the argument. To pacify worried parents, the preservative thimerosal has been mostly phased out. In this new study the team ran an inoculation schedule on a large group of rhesus monkey infants to see if they developed any of the symptoms of an ASD.

The researchers inoculated 79 of the male monkeys (whose brains and physiology are very similar to humans), varying the age at which they were given and a combination of vaccines, and of course with or without themersol. They also injected a control group with a saline solution. Some of the monkeys got the same regimen as children in the U.S. received during the 1990’s or in 2008. Afterwards, all of the monkeys were monitored to see if they developed ASD type symptoms—none did. The researchers also killed some of the monkeys in order to perform brain autopsies, once again looking for hallmarks of an ASD, and once again, none were found.

The team reports that no evidence of any ASD was found in any of the monkeys, and thus rejects the hypothesis that vaccines alone or with thimerosal are the cause of a rise in the number of children diagnosed with such disorders over the past several decades.

Bron: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences