Science of Vaccine
Damage
by Catherine O'Driscoll (posted with permission)
A team at Purdue University School of Veterinary Medicine
conducted several studies (1,2) to determine if vaccines can
cause changes in the immune system of dogs that might lead to
life-threatening immune-mediated diseases. It was sponsored by
the Haywood Foundation which itself was looking for evidence
that such changes in the human immune system might also be
vaccine induced.>> The vaccinated, but not the
non-vaccinated, dogs in the Purdue studies developed
autoantibodies to many of their own biochemicals, including
fibronectin, laminin, DNA, albumin, cytochrome C, cardiolipin
and collagen.
This means that the vaccinated dogs -- "but not the
non-vaccinated dogs"-- were attacking their own fibronectin,
which is involved in tissue repair, cell multiplication and
growth, and differentiation between tissues and organs in a
living organism. The vaccinated Purdue dogs also developed
autoantibodies to laminin, which is involved in many cellular
activities including the adhesion, spreading, differentiation,
proliferation and movement of cells. Vaccines thus appear to be
capable of removing the natural intelligence of cells.
Autoantibodies to cardiolipin are frequently found in
patients with the serious disease systemic lupus erythematosus
and also in individuals with other autoimmune diseases. The
presence of elevated anti-cardiolipin antibodies is
significantly associated with clots within the heart or blood
vessels, in poor blood clotting, haemorrhage, bleeding into the
skin, foetal loss and neurological conditions.
The Purdue studies also found that vaccinated dogs were
developing autoantibodies to their own collagen. About one
quarter of all the protein in the body is collagen. Collagen
provides structure to our bodies, protecting and supporting the
softer tissues and connecting them with the skeleton. It is no
wonder that Canine Health Concern's 1997 study of 4,000 dogs
showed a high number of dogs developing mobility problems
shortly after they were vaccinated.
Perhaps most worryingly, the Purdue studies found that the
vaccinated dogs had developed autoantibodies to their own DNA.
The study dogs were found good homes, but no long-term follow-up
has been conducted. At around the same time, the American
Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) Vaccine-Associated
Feline Sarcoma Task Force initiated several studies to
find out why 160,000 cats each year in the USA develop
terminal cancer at their vaccine injection sites.(3) The
fact that cats can get vaccine-induced cancer has been
acknowledged by veterinary bodies around the world, and
even the British Government acknowledged it through its
Working Group charged with the task of looking into canine
and feline vaccines(4) following pressure from Canine
Health Concern. In America, in an attempt to mitigate the
problem, they're vaccinating cats in the tail or leg so
they can>> amputate when cancer appears.
In August 2003, the Journal of Veterinary Medicine carried
an Italian study which showed that dogs also develop
vaccine-induced cancers at their injection sites.(5) We already
know that vaccine-site cancer is a possible sequel to human
vaccines, too, since the Salk polio vaccine was said to carry a
monkey retrovirus (from cultivating the vaccine on monkey
organs) that produces inheritable cancer. The monkey retrovirus
SV40 keeps turning up in human cancer sites.
It is also widely acknowledged that vaccines can cause a
fast-acting, usually fatal, disease called autoimmune
haemolytic anaemia (AIHA). Without treatment, and frequently
with treatment, individuals can die in agony within a matter of
days. Merck, a multinational vaccine manufacturer, states in
The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy that autoimmune
haemolytic anaemia may be caused by modified live-virus
vaccines, as do Tizard's Veterinary Immunology (4th edition)
and the Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine.(6) The British
Government's Working Group, despite being staffed by
vaccine-industry consultants who say they are independent, also
acknowledged this fact.
A Wide Range of Vaccine-induced Diseases The New England
Journal of Medicine reported that it is possible to isolate the
rubella virus from affected joints in children vaccinated
against rubella. It also told of the isolation of viruses from
the peripheral blood of women with prolonged arthritis
following vaccination.(7)
In 2000 CHC's findings were confirmed by research which
showed that polyarthritis and other diseases like amyloidosis,
which affects organs in dogs, were linked to the combined
vaccine given to dogs.(8) There is a huge body of research,
despite the paucity of funding from the vaccine industry, to
confirm that vaccines can cause a wide range of brain and
central nervous system damage. Merck itself states in its
Manual that vaccines can cause encephalitis: brain
inflammation/damage. In some cases, encephalitis involves
lesions in the brain and throughout the central nervous system.
Merck states that "examples are the encephalitides following
measles, chickenpox, rubella, smallpox vaccination, vaccinia,
and many other less well defined viral infections".
Organ failure must also be suspected when it occurs shortly
after a vaccine event. Dr Larry Glickman, who spearheaded the
Purdue research into post-vaccination biochemical changes in
dogs, wrote in a letter to Cavalier Spaniel breeder Bet
Hargreaves:
"Our ongoing studies of dogs show that following routine
vaccination, there is a significant rise in the level of
antibodies dogs produce against their own tissues. Some of
these antibodies have been shown to target the thyroid gland,
connective tissue such as that found in the valves of the
heart, red blood cells, DNA, etc. I do believe that the heart
conditions in Cavalier King Charles Spaniels could be the end
result of repeated immunisations by vaccines containing tissue
culture contaminants that cause a progressive immune response
directed at connective tissue in the heart valves. The clinical
manifestations would be more pronounced in dogs that have a
genetic predisposition [although] the findings should be
generally applicable to all dogs regardless of their
breed."
Dr Glickman believes that vaccines are a
necessary evil, but that safer vaccines need to be
developed. Vaccines Stimulate an Inflammatory Response The
word "allergy" is synonymous with "sensitivity" and
"inflammation". Vaccines sensitise an individual in the
process to develop antibodies to fight a disease threat.
Part of the vaccine process is the body will respond with
inflammation.
There are some individuals who are genetically not well
placed to withstand the vaccine challenge. These are the people
(and animals ) who have inherited faulty B and T cell function.
B and T cells are components within the immune system which
identify foreign invaders and destroy them, and hold the
invader in memory so that they cannot cause future harm.
However, where inflammatory responses are concerned, the immune
system overreacts and causes unwanted effects such as allergies
and other inflammatory conditions.
Merck warns in its Manual that patients with, or from
families with, B and/or T cell immunodeficiencies should not
receive live-virus vaccines due to the risk of severe or fatal
infection. Elsewhere, it lists features of B and T cell
immunodeficiencies as food allergies, inhalant allergies,
eczema, dermatitis, neurological deterioration and heart
disease.
Veterinary schools in America, plus the American Veterinary
Medical Association, have looked at studies to show how long
vaccines last and they have concluded and announced that annual
vaccination is unnecessary.(16-19) Further, they have
acknowledged that vaccines are not without harm. Dr Ron
Schultz, head of pathobiology at Wisconsin University and a
leading light in this field, has been saying this politely to
his veterinary colleagues since the 1980s.
Endnotes
1. "Effects of Vaccination on the Endocrine and Immune
Systems of Dogs, Phase II", Purdue University, November 1,1999,
at
http://www.homestead.com/vonhapsburg/haywardstudyonvaccines.html
.
2. See www.vet.purdue.edu/epi/gdhstudy.htm
.
3. See http://www.avma.org/vafstf/default.asp
.
4. Veterinary Products Committee (VPC) Working Group on
Feline and Canine Vaccination, DEFRA, May 2001.
5. JVM Series A 50(6):286-291, August 2003.
6 Duval, D. and Giger,U. (1996). "Vaccine-Associated
Immune-Mediated Hemolytic Anemia in the Dog", Journal of
Veterinary Internal Medicine 10:290-295.
7. New England Journal of Medicine, vol.313,1985. See also
Clin Exp Rheumatol 20(6):767-71, Nov-Dec 2002.
8. Am Coll Vet Intern Med 14:381,2000.
9. Dodds, Jean W.,DVM, "Immune System and Disease
Resistance",at http://www.critterchat.net/immune.htm
.
10. Wolf Clan magazine, April/May 1995.
11. Goldstein, Martin, The Nature of Animal
Healing,Borzoi/Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1999.
12. Wolf Clan magazine, op. cit.
13. ibid.
14. Journal of Inflammation 1:3,2004, at http://www.journal-inflammation.com
content/1/1/3.
15. Klingborg, D.J., Hustead, D.R. and Curry-Galvin, E. et
al., "AVMA Council on Biologic and Therapeutic Agents' report
on cat and dog vaccines", Journal of the American Veterinary
Medical Association 221(10):1401-1407, November 15,2002,
http://www.avma.org/policies/vaccination.htm
.
16. ibid.
17.Schultz, R.D., "Current and future canine and feline
vaccination programs", Vet Med 93:233-254,1998.
18. Schultz, R.D., Ford, R.B., Olsen, J. and Scott, P.,
"Titer testing and vaccination: a new look at traditional
practices", Vet Med 97:1-13, 2002 (insert).
19. Twark, L. and Dodds, W.J., "Clinical application of
serum parvovirus and distemper virus antibody liters for
determining revaccination strategies in healthy dogs", J Am Vet
Med Assoc 217:1021-1024,2000.
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