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Adverse Reactions to Hep B Vax
THE SAGA OF PEDIATRIC HEPATITIS B VACCINATION From the Pink Sheets to the VAERS Reports By RFD Columnist, F. Edward Yazbak, MD, FAAP, October 15, 2003
EMAIL me if you are not able to access this file vaccineinfo@tesco.net
Warning: New Hepatitis Vaccine Recs Can Devastate Newborn's Health Spread the word about this NOW!
OSHA refusal of hepatitis B vaccine in the workplace info
Hepatitis B: The Disease & The Vaccine NVIC's website info
HEPATITIS B DISEASE AND VACCINE FACTS
Hep B vaccine stole 2 years of my life 28 March 2005 I have dozens and dozens more reports like this from nurses, other health care and emergency workers and parents of infants and teens
List of Geier Articles many hep b vaccines contain mercury
Hepatitis B Vaccine: The Untold Story
Hepatitis B Vaccine Hearings Hearings were held before a Congressional committee in May of 1999 and research is still continuing...
Testimony of Marilyn & Lindsay Kirschner On the Hepatitis B Vaccine Teen damaged by Hep B Vax
How Safe is Universal Hep B Vaccination
How Safe is Universal Hep B Vaccination References
Testimony of Betty D. Fluck on her Hepatitis B Vaccine Damage/illness
Testimony of other Hepatitis V Vaccine Victims
Dr. F.E. Yazbak, MD, FAAP on Hepatitis B Vaccine
TESTIMONY OF MICHAEL BELKIN BEFORE THE ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON
IMMUNIZATION PRACTICES -- CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION --
February 17, 1999 -- Atlanta Georgia
Hepatitis B Vaccine Hearings/House of Reps/Patty White R, School Nurse Perspective
Testimony of Bonnie Dunbar at May 18, 1999 House Hearings on Hep B Vax
Testimony of Burton A. Waisbren, Sr., MD, May 18, 1999
Full Transcripts of House of Rep Reform Committee Hearings - HEPATITIS B VACCINE: HELPING OR HURTING PUBLIC HEALTH? May 18, 1999
Philip Incao, MD's Testimony in Ohio Regarding Hepatitis B Vaccine
Moratorium on Hepatitis B Vaccine Burton A. Waisbren, MD
VACCINE SAFETY GROUP ENDORSES
GOVERNMENT ACTION TO ELIMINATE MERCURY
IN CHILDHOOD VACCINES AND ROLL BACK HEPATITIS B
VACCINATION FOR
Hepatitis-B vaccination in newborns Kris Gaublomme, MD
Much more here on this website
Hepatitis B Vaccine
More here on all
http://www.waisbrenclinic.com
INTRODUCTION
To be presented here are four patterns that raise some
concerns about vaccinating all babies in the U.S. with
the hepatitis B vaccine. The patterns are as follows:
The historical pattern of events that followed the
introduction of an antirabies vaccine in the late
1800's and of warnings regarding probable occurrence of
vaccine complications given by medical scientists
during the past 50 years; the pattern revealed by
animal experimentation that showed that viruses and
viral particles may cause demyelination and
autoimmunity in a variety of species; the pattern of
autoimmunity and demyelination that has been caused by
the hepatitis B infection, itself; the pattern of
clinical reports that reveal that demyelination and
autoimmunity have appeared in patients vaccinated with
hepatitis B vaccines.
Reasonable steps that might be taken to address the
concerns evoked by the above patterns will be
discussed.
--------------------------------------------------------
Postvaccinal Encephalomyelitis and Warnings by Medical
Scientists
Postvaccinal encephalomyelitis has been recognized and
accepted as a clinical entity since it first occurred
after Pasteur's antirabies vaccine was used. (7) At
first the encephalomyelitis was thought to be caused by
the nervous tissue in which the virus used for the
vaccine was grown. (7) However, postvaccinal
encephalomyelitis has appeared in patients who received
vaccine grown in duck eggs, so it is now thought that
the syndrome is caused by something present in the dead
virus.(8) Postvaccinal encephalomyelitis has since been
observed after a wide variety of vaccinations.
Within the past 30 years representatives of the medical
establishment have discussed and warned about
neurologic complications of various vaccines. (9-12)
Wilson, in his 1967 monograph regarding vaccine
complications, pointed out that there are no insurance
policies without premiums and that strict attention
must be paid to the premiums exacted by each
vaccine.(9) Miller, in 1954, discussed the neurologic
sequelae of vaccination and the difficulty of these
complications being recognized and accepted. (10)
Zuckerman, in an article in 1974 in Nature entitled
"Hepatitis Vaccine: A note of caution" pointed out that
autoimmunity might well follow the hepatitis B
vaccinations because the disease, itself, involved
autoimmunity.(11) He suggested, "careful assessment of
all vaccine effects on the immune system."(11) As late
as 1988, Hilleman, who some call the "father" of
hepatitis B vaccine, warned "the message from the
hypothetical hepatitis B example is that the
administration of antigens or monoclonal antibodies
that directly or indirectly raise antibodies that
attach to host cell receptors may carry large
liabilities even though they might provide a convenient
means for preventing viral access to host cells...
antibodies attached to cell receptors may invite the
same kinds of adverse response that are believed to be
responsible for a variety of autoimmune disorders."
(12)
Experiments In Animals That Lead To Concerns about the
Hepatitis B Vaccine
Experiments done on animals in the past 60 years have
yielded data that add to the concerns about present day
viral vaccines. These experiments have shown that
polypeptide chains of the types found in viruses that
are homologous or nearly homologous with myelin can
cause demyelination and have shown that viruses,
themselves, can cause demyelination.(13)
The experiments started in 1956 when Rivers showed that
myelin injected into monkeys caused demyelination.(14)
Wakesman expanded these studies and developed an
experimental model in which myelin and adjuvant
consistently caused demyelinating disease in mice and
rabbits.(15) This has been widely accepted as a model
for demyelinating diseases in humans and is called
experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE). (16)
Stohlman found that a DNA virus called JHM could cause
demyelination in mice. (17) Oldstone then presented
experimental evidence that autoimmunity in humans was
caused by polypeptides in viruses that were homologous
to those in human tissue. (18) Fujinami and Oldstone
produced EAE in rabbits with proteins from hepatitis B
virus that had polypeptides in it that were homologous
with myelin.(19) Ziegler produced EAE in rabbits with
the Swine Flu Vaccine and adjuvants.(20)
Westall and Root-Bernstein presented data that
suggested a syndrome they called
Multiple-Antigen-Mediated-Autoimmunity (MAMA) could
occur in animals and humans. (21) They postulated that
the MAMA Syndrome was operative in postvaccinal
encephalomyelitis as well as in EAE.(21) Root-Bernstein
hypothesized that this syndrome could occur in humans
if four conditions were met. The first was demonstrated
homology between an antigen and host tissue. The second
was the presence simultaneously, of more than one
antigen. The third was complementarity between the
antigens shown to be present. The fourth was the
additional presence of a bacterial adjuvant. As will be
discussed later, all of these requirements can be
tested for as a possible explanation for post hepatitis
B vaccine reactions.
Finally, the HLA patterns of experimental animals has
been shown to influence their susceptibility to
experimental demyelinating diseases.(22)
Hepatitis B Infection Causes Autoimmunity and
Demyelination
Another group of patterns regarding the consideration
of universal hepatitis vaccination, without factoring
in risk factors that have been largely ignored, are
those revealed by the findings that the infection,
itself, causes autoimmunity and demyelination. In 1977,
London first reported that autoimmune disease was
caused by circulating immune complexes caused by viral
antibody association.(23) In 1987, Tsukada reported
demyelinizing neuropathy associated with the hepatitis
B infection.(24) Discussions and case reports regarding
autoimmunity occurring with the hepatitis B infection
have been presented by Vento et al and McFarlane et
al.(25,26) As early as 1976, Zuckerman cautioned that
since autoimmunity is involved in the pathogenesis of
hepatitis B infections that it might be augmented by a
hepatitis B vaccination.(11)
Reports Of Demyelination and Autoimmunity After
Hepatitis B Vaccination
Clinical experiences since the general release of
hepatitis B vaccines suggest that clinical counterparts
of the animal studies and autoimmunity that occurs
after the hepatitis B infection occur after hepatitis B
vaccination. The first report of demyelination after
the hepatitis B vaccination was that of Ribera and
Dutka in 1983. The complication was transient.(27) The
authors stated inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathies
after both viral diseases and vaccinations have been
widely reported.(27) They emphasized the necessity of
continued surveillance of the use of hepatitis B
vaccine.(27) I have noted seven cases of a neurologic
picture resembling multiple sclerosis (MS) after
hepatitis B vaccination. (28) In 1987, Fried et al
reported uveitis that occurred in a 20-year-old nurse
after a booster dose of hepatitis B vaccine.(29) They
pointed out that there is a higher than normal level of
hepatitis B antibodies in some uveitis patients. They
postulated that these antibodies combined with surface
antigens in the vaccine could form a disease producing
immune complex.(29)
Shaw et al reported a post marketing surveillance study
regarding neurologic events after the hepatitis B
vaccine in 1988. (30) An estimated 850,000 individuals
had received the vaccine by the time of their study.
They found ten cases of Bell's palsy, nine cases of
Guillain-Barre Syndrome, five cases of lumbar
radiculopathy, three cases of brachial plexus
neuropathy, five cases of optic neuritis, and four
cases of transverse myelitis. They concluded, on the
basis of the controversial epidemiologic methods used
to study the Swine Flu epidemic of 1976, that the risk
of the vaccine was outweighed by the prophylactic
benefits in "high risk groups."(30,31) However, even
using these methods, they concluded that the
demyelinating disease, Guillain-Barre Syndrome,
occurred more often in individuals who had been
vaccinated than in the general population.(30) In 1988,
Biron et al reported a case of myasthenia gravis that
occurred after anesthesia and a hepatitis B
vaccination.(32) They postulated that the autoimmune
disease was due to the "challenge" to the immune system
by the vaccine.(32) In 1989, Goolsby reported a case of
erythema nodosum that occurred after recombinant
hepatitis B vaccine. (33) In 1991, Herroelen et al
reported on two patients who developed symptoms of
increasing demyelination after a vaccination of
recombinant hepatitis B vaccine. (34) He mentioned that
their HLA patterns might be a contributing factor.
Seven hundred reports of adverse reactions to the
hepatitis B vaccine were sent in to the Vaccine Adverse
Events Reporting Systems (VAERS) between October 1990
and September 1991.(35) This system was set up via the
National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986. Sixteen
percent of these reports were of damage presumed to be
to the myelin of the nervous system. There were 21
cases of facial paralysis and six cases of MS.
Eighty-two of the complications occurred in patients
who received plasma derived vaccine and 18 occurred in
those who received recombinant vaccine. (35) This
difference can be explained by the fact that at the
time the VAERS were examined, the recombinant vaccine
had just come into general use. In 1990, in the World
Health Organization Drug Information Bulletin two cases
of optic neuritis and one case of Guillain-Barre
Syndrome were reported to be among the 200 reports of
adverse reactions that were reported by the Australian
National Regulatory Body. (36) One patient had vertigo
and diplopia attributed to demyelination eight months
after the vaccination.(36)
In 1993, Trevisani et al reported a case of transverse
myelitis that followed a recombinant vaccination in an
11 year-old girl.(37) Their arguments for a causal link
between the vaccination and the transverse myelitis
were the temporal association (21 days), the previous
report of Shaw's in which the same complication
occurred, and no clinical evidence of any other cause
of the disease.(37) They pointed out that transverse
myelitis was occasionally found in patients with
hepatitis B. (37) This suggested to them that there
might be antigenic determinants held in common with the
capsular antigen of the hepatitis B vaccine and
myelin.(37)
In 1993, Nadler et al reported a case of "classic MS,"
the prodromal of which appeared 10 days after a
recombinant vaccination. (38) They stated that the
benefits of the hepatitis B vaccination, among the
population for "which it is usually recommended," far
out weigh any potential risks.(38) In 1990, there was a
report in the British Medical Journal of vasculitis
related to the hepatitis B vaccination.(39) It was felt
to be due to immune complex disease. In 1993, Brezin et
al reported visual loss and eosinophilia after a
recombinant hepatitis B vaccine.(40)
In 1995, Kaplanski et al reported a case of central
nervous system demyelination that occurred in a
37-year-old man two weeks after receiving the third
hepatitis B injection.(41) This patient had the same
haplotype as the patient reported by Herroelen.(34)
They suggested that the hepatitis B vaccination could
potentially induce CNS demyelination in patients with
HLA, B7, DR2 haplotype, whether or not these patients
have a history of MS.(41)
Vautier and Carty in 1994 reported a case of classic
rheumatoid arthritis that followed a hepatitis B
vaccination.(42) They brought up the fact that the
patient was HLA, DR4 positive which would be consistent
with both animal and previous clinical reports
regarding complications of the hepatitis B
vaccine.(22,33,42) Hassan and Oldham reported two cases
of reactive arthritis and Reiter's Syndrome that
occurred after a recombinant hepatitis B vaccine.(43)
They cite a personal communication from the
manufacturer that stated that in 11 cases reported to
them of reactive arthritis following recombinant
hepatitis B vaccine that six had a recurrence of
symptoms after a second vaccination.(43)
In 1995, Tartaglina et al reported a case of
postvaccinal myelitis that occurred one month after a
hepatitis B vaccination.. (44) They suggested that
complications of this sort may be under reported
because there can be a delay in symptom
occurrences.(44) In the case they reported, symptoms
did not occur until one month after a single injection
of the vaccine. No other cause of the myelitis was
shown by a MRI.(44)
DISCUSSION
How might the concerns evoked by the material that has
been presented be addressed?
Parents of babies and adolescents who have little chance of being exposed to hepatitis B should be made aware of the potential dangers of the vaccine. A
perspective, inclusive, long term follow up study of a
large number of individuals who have received the
vaccine should be done and the results should be made
available to the parents of children who are to be
vaccinated. While these admittedly tedious studies are
being conducted, databases available through societies
such as the Multiple Sclerosis Society might be used to
determine if an inordinate number of patients with
multiple sclerosis had received a hepatitis B
vaccination prior to being diagnosed.
The literally hundreds of individuals who have been
reported to VAERS and pharmaceutical companies, who
claim to have suffered demyelination and autoimmunity
from a hepatitis B vaccine, should be followed up to
determine their HLA patterns to ascertain if host
factors are partially causative of the
complication.(22,33)
A large group of individuals who are to be vaccinated
should have before and after determinations by the
methods of Zhang, Wucherpfennig and Strominger of the
percentage of their T-cells that exhibit antimyelin
activity to determine if vaccination does evoke such
cells in some individuals with certain HLA
patterns.(47,48)
The ability of vaccines when injected with adjuvant
into animals to cause EAE should be tested using the
methods of Fujinami and Ziegler.(19,20)
The hypothesis and studies of Westall and
Root-Bernstein that indicate a multifactorial
pathogenesis of postvaccinal encephalomyelitis suggest
a series of studies that could be done on vaccines and
on patients who developed complications after the
hepatitis B vaccination.(21) Hepatitis B vaccine and
all other vaccines should be tested for the extent of
their polypeptide homology with human tissue.(13,21) If
significant homology were to be demonstrated, the
offending polypeptides could be removed from the
vaccine or synthetic vaccines could be produced without
them. (49,50) If such a homology were to be
demonstrated, it would fulfill the first requirement
for the provocative hypothetical MAMA Syndrome of
Westall and Root-Bernstein. (21) The second requirement
for the MAMA Syndrome is that multiple antigens are
present.(21) These could be tested for by serologic
studies for the Epstein-Barr Virus and other viruses
that already have been indicted in this syndrome.(21)
The third requirement that complementarity between
antigens must be demonstrated could be tested for by
complementarity studies between the hepatitis B vaccine
and other antigens uncovered by the aforementioned
serologic tests. (51) The fourth requirement that an
adjuvant be present could be tested for by
serologically determining whether muramyl peptides are
present. (52) These peptides are well established
adjuvants and are ubiquitous as part of the cell walls
of all bacteria.(52)
The above-mentioned studies might well yield
information that would not only make all vaccines
safer, but could lead to means to prevent postvaccinal
autoimmunity by the methods shown to work in animals by
Westall and Root-Bernstein and Norga et al.(53,54)
Finally, it should be emphasized that the concerns voiced above in no way denigrate worldwide programs that are attempting to reduce hepatitis B in populations of extremely high risk, both
internationally and in the U.S.(55) Certainly, there should be no abrupt stopping of present vaccination
programs in the U.S., but it does seem reasonable to develop an informed consent that discloses to parents the potential dangers of the vaccine. Parents then would be able to intelligently decide whether the risk
involved justifies their child receiving the
vaccination. This might be particularly reasonable in
areas of the U.S. in which the incidence of hepatitis B
is very low.
References to Waisbren article above
Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy and Human
Resources Committee on Government Reform
"Hepatitis B Vaccine: Helping or Hurting Public Health"
The Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy, and
Human Resources May 18, 1999
Michael Belkin Testimony to Congress - Tuesday, May 18,1999
MOST NEWBORN INFANTS Press Release by NVIC (National Vaccine Information Center)
How Safe Is Universal Hepatitis B Vaccination? by Burton A. Waisbren, Sr., M.D., F.A.C.P.
Universal hepatitis B vaccination of infants in the United States, regardless of risk factors, was first
proposed by Margolis and his coworkers of the hepatitis branch of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia.(1,2) The concept was endorsed and augmented by West and his coworkers at the Merck Sharpe and Dohme research laboratories in West Point, Pennsylvania.(3) The rationale presented for universal vaccination of infants in the U.S. stemmed from the failure of the current strategies for controlling this
disease and not from trials that demonstrated the
effectiveness or safety of a universal hepatitis B
vaccination program.(4,5) In spite of this, universal
hepatitis B vaccination is achieving wide spread
acceptance among medical organizations and is being
vigorously pursued in many sections of the
country.(5,6)
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