Why Chelation Therapy May Benefit Autistic Children
This time last week I would guess that most people had never even heard the word chelation (pronounced ‘key-LAY-shun’). And it’s too bad that they should be introduced to this therapy by a tragedy because chelation is a useful tool. Chelation therapy is widely used in the US and has been approved by the Food and Drug Association (FDA) for treating children who have lead poisoning.
But there’s a catch.
Chelation was first developed in the 1940s by the US Navy to treat lead poisoning. In addition to lead, chelation purges other heavy metals as well when the chelating agent ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA) is injected intravenously, binds to metals and removes them from the body through urination. Chelation also binds with mineral deposits and is often used to treat arterial disease by removing plaques from artery walls. So chelation is like a bouncer at a nightclub, locating unwanted patrons and escorting them out the door.
Now here’s the catch: In spite of the FDA approval to use this therapy on children, the medical mainstream CAN’T recognise the effectiveness of chelation in treating autism because that would amount to an official recognition of one of the suspected causes of autism: mercury toxicity from the vaccine preservative thimerosal.
Ignoring connected dots
I’m not going to reopen the thimerosal can of worms in today’s e-alert. Suffice it to say that the twin mainstreams of medicine and the media seem determined to place as much distance as possible between autism and the slightest hint that a vaccine ingredient might be at the root of the stunning rise in autism rates, which happen to parallel the rise in the use of thimerosal.
As I mentioned in the e-alert ‘Latest findings suggest link between vaccines and autism’ (22/7/05), Thimerosal is being phased out of use in vaccines in the UK. Only hepatitis B and influenza in the UK programme now contain thimerosal.
There’s just one little problem with the mainstream dismissal of the thimerosal/autism connection. For many autistic kids, chelation works. And this is one of those rare cases where there can be no placebo effect. Children don’t snap out of autism just because they’re aware they’re being treated.
Like so many alternative therapies, chelation has not been exhaustively researched. But when you’re the desperate parents of an autistic child, you don’t have the luxury of waiting until the day when we know all there is to know about this therapy. According to the Associated Press, a 2001 Autism Research Institute report showed that in a survey of more than 23,000 parents who resorted to chelation for their autistic children, nearly three out of four said this detox method had helped.
Chelation therapy is available on the NHS here in the UK for treating heavy metal poisoning.
Will level heads prevail?
I hope the heartbreaking death of the autistic boy isn’t exploited by the mainstream and used as an excuse to ban chelation therapy. When the details of this case come to light, hopefully we’ll be able to pinpoint exactly what went wrong. When I asked US HSI Panellist Dr Allan Spreen for his thoughts, he pointed out that we still don’t know what type of chelation was used (there are several – some are considered more risky than others), what the dose was and how quickly the dose was given.
He finished his comments with this: ‘Too bad the 600 people who die of common oral aspirin EVERY YEAR don’t get the same press!’
Excellent point. This is the first chelation-related death in nearly half a century.
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All therapies and interventions have possible side effects, but I think the benefits of chelation therapy outweigh the risks.