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Do toxins trigger autistic regression?

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Do toxins trigger autistic regression? McGinnis WR, Miller VM, Audya T and Edelson S. Neurotoxic brainstem impairment as proposed threshold event in autistic regression. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Do toxins trigger autistic regression?


1
Do toxins trigger autistic regression?
  • McGinnis WR, Miller VM, Audya T and Edelson S.
  • Neurotoxic brainstem impairment as proposed
    threshold event in autistic regression.
  • CRC Press 2009

2
Intriguing phenomenon of autistic regression
  • Widely recognized
  • Usually 18-24 months of age
  • Relatively rapid days or weeks
  • Earlier problems in some children
  • Published incidence as high as 50

3
ARI Database
4
Features of regression
  • Vocalization loss acquired words or babbling
    (29 / 9. Lord 2004)
  • Loss of social function, in some cases
    unassociated with loss of vocalization (Goldberg
    2003)
  • Gastrointestinal impairment (Madsen 2004
    Goldberg 2004)

5
GI tract in regressed cohorts
  • Radiographic fecal loading or megacolon (100.
    Torrente 2002)
  • Reflux esophagitis (69. Horvath 1999)
  • Enterocolitis (88. Wakefield 1998, 2002)

6
Toxins are plausible triggers
  • Parallel increase in autism and
  • environmental toxicants (Lathe 2008)
  • Autism rates correlate with
  • 1. Presence of toxic landfills (Ming 2008)
  • 2. Estimated environmental cadmium
  • and mercury (Windham 2006)
  • 3. Proximity to mercury point sources
  • (Palmer 2009)

7
Toxins as triggers
  • Elevated dental concentrations of mercury (Adams
    2007)
  • Autistic symptoms correlate with
    mercury-consistent porphyrins (Geier 2008)
  • Case reports
  • Geier temporal association with mercury
  • by injection
  • Bradstreet, et al on-off speech on DMSA

8
The case of R.K.
  • Progressive loss of speech over weeks post
    one-time placement of 9 amalgams at age 4.
  • By age 6, had regained 200 words, but elevated
    blood Hg explicable only on basis of amalgams.
  • Subsequent loss of all speech immediately after
    one-time removal of amalgams without precautions.

9
Toxins as triggers
  • Many neurotoxins are oxidative, and oxidative
    modification is increased in brain of autistic
    children (Evans 2008 Lopez-Hurtado 2008
    Sajdel-Sulkowska 2008)
  • Gliosis and neuronal loss in autism is consistent
    with toxicant effects (Kern 2006)

10
Circumventricular Organs (CVO)
  • Area postrema (AP) Posterior
    pituitary
  • Median eminence (ME) Subfornical Organ
  • Organum vasculosum Pineal Gland
  • Nucleus Tractus Solitarius (NTS)
  • Portals for toxins no blood-brain barrier (BBB)
  • In and around the brainstem

11
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12
CVO are preferentially sensitive to a broad class
of neurotoxins
  • Cadmium
  • Monosodium glutamate (MSG)
  • Paraquat
  • Inorganic mercury (including inorganic mercury
    from metabolic conversion of organic and
    elemental forms)

13
Cadmium
  • Injections accumulate only in brain outside BBB,
    including AP and pineal (Arvidson 1986)
  • Lipid peroxidation (Mendez-Armenta 2003) blocked
    by antioxidants (Kim 2008)
  • Inhibits complex II and III (Wang 2004)

14
MSG
  • Injections accumulate only in brain outside BBB,
    including AP (Karcsu 1985) and ME (Meister 1989
    Peruzzo 2000)
  • Lipid peroxidation, persistent for long periods
    (Bawari 1995 Singh 2003)
  • Excitotoxic. In autism, GAD much lower in brain
    (Fatemi 2002)

15
Paraquat
  • Injections accumulate only in areas outside the
    BBB, including AP and pineal (Naylor 1995)
  • Increased TNF-a and superoxide production by
    microglia (Wu 2005)
  • Inhibits complexes II and IV
  • (Palmeira 1995)

16
Inorganic mercury
  • Worrisome levels in air, water, soil (McGinnis
    2001) and food (Dufault 2009)
  • Pink Disease proves fractional systemic
    absorption in children (McGinnis 2001)
  • Injections accumulate in AP and brainstem motor
    nuclei (Arvidson 1992)
  • Persists in brain for years (Vahter 1994)
  • Immune stimulation (Havarinasab 2007) and
    increased microglia (Geier 2007)

17
Elemental mercury
  • Amalgam removal decreased plasma and red-cell
    inorganic mercury levels by 73 (Halbach 2008)

18
Daily oral organic (methyl) mercury in primates
  • In 6 brain areas, inorganic mercury averaged x30
    at 6 mos., x60 at 18 mos.
  • By far, highest inorganic mercury at pituitary,
    only CVO examined.
  • If stop organic dosing at 6 mos, inorganic
    mercury doubles in pituitary at 12 months, but
    not in regions with BBB.
  • (Vahter 1994)

19
Brainstem
  • The hard-drive control panel for messages
    between brain and body
  • Rimland emphasized brainstem in 1964, but scant
    current neuropath interest
  • Many findings in autism consistent with brainstem
    dysfunction

20
Brainstem medulla, pons, midbrain and
diencephalon
21
Brain phylogeny
22
x2
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25
Brainstem abnormalities
  • Smaller medulla and midbrain on MRI (Courchesne
    1997 Hashimoto 1993)
  • Reduced gray matter on MRI (Jou 2008)
  • Ectopic neurons and aberrant tracts (Bailey 1998)
  • Swollen medullary, thalamic, hypothalamic axon
    terminals (Weidenheim 2001)
  • Abnormalities of inferior and superior olives
    (Kemper 1993 Kulesza 2008)

26
Brainstem abnormalities
  • Auditory brainstem response (Klin 1993 Kwon
    2007)
  • Centrencephalic EEG (Gilberg 1983)
  • Heart rate, respiratory and vascular response
    (Bonvallet 1963 Althaus 2004)
  • Post-rotatory response (Ornitz 1983)

27
Suggest CVO impairment
  • Pineal abnormal melatonin production (Nir
    1995 Kulman 2000 Tordjmann 2005)
  • Median eminence / posterior pituitary abnormal
    oxytocin production (Modahl 1998 Green 2001)

28
Hypothalamus and pineal in relation to thalamus
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30
Dorsal vagal complex (DVC)
  • Area postrema (AP)
  • Dorsal motor nucleus of vagus (DMV)
  • Nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS)
  • The DVC mediates autonomic function of
  • cervical, thoracic and abdominal viscera.

31
Portals for toxins
32
Dorsal vagal complex (DVC)
33
Dorsal vagal complex (DVC)
34
Area postrema
  • No BBB
  • Highly vascular and very long residence time of
    blood in capillaries
  • So-called emesis center
  • Ablation increases consumption of water or
    concentrated salt water, food aversions, craving
    for carbohydrates and bland food
  • Flavor aversion 2 Cd reversed by DMSA

35
Nucleus tractus solitarius
  • Lacks BBB on one side (Gross 1990)
  • Viscerosensory and visceromotor parasympathetic
    and sympathetic efferent
  • Mediates social behavior, arousal, mood, emotion,
    anxiety, seizure activity and pain via limbic and
    cortical projections (Marvel 2004 Nemeroff 2006)

36
Secretin and NTS
  • Highest binding of infused secretin at NTS
    secretin activates NTS neurons (Yang 2004)
  • Several studies reported improvements in social
    behaviormay relate to NTS effect (Myers 2008)
  • Parent reports of sudden potty-training
    consistent with NTS effect (Beck, et al.)

37
Dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMV)
  • Visceromotor peristalsis, esophageal sphincter
    tone, heart rate, pharyngeal and laryngeal
    musculature
  • Tensor palati to open eustachian tube
  • Viscerosecretory digestion, floral balance

38
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39
Phonation
  • Significantly autonomic, subconscious
  • DMV visceromotor to all the intrinsic and
    extrinsic muscles of larynx and pharynx
  • Vagal alteration results in altered pitch
    (Shaffer 2005)
  • Vagal dysarthria should not be confused with
    classical motor apraxia of speech

40
DVC is anti-inflammatory
41
Suggest DVC impairment
  • Excessive thirst (Terai 1999)
  • Salt-craving and flavor-aversion (ARI)
  • Otitis media (Konstantareas 1987 Rosenhall 1999)
  • Abnormal heart rate, respiratory and vascular
    (Bonvallet 1963 Althaus 2004)
  • Depressed cardiac parasympathetic and abnormal
    baroreflex (Ming 2005)

42
Suggest DVC impairment
  • Esophageal reflux in 67 of regressed cohort
    (Horvath 1999)
  • Fecal loading or megacolon in 100 of regressed
    cohort (Torrente 2002)
  • Enterocolitis in 88 of regressed cohort
    (Wakefield 1998)
  • Paneths cells enlarged with granules (Horvath
    1999)

43
Duodenal Paneths cells (Courtesy
of K. Horvath, Thomas Jefferson University)
44
Suggest DVC impairment
  • 20 aged 3-5 identify better by pointing of
    23,685 children who regressed after 1 year, 4,141
    had speech replaced by whisper for at least one
    week, and 679 whispered long-term (ARI parent
    survey)
  • Effective use of speech-generating device
    (Thunberg 2007)
  • Frank dysarthria reported in autistic subgroup
    (Weissman 2008)

45
Primary DVC impairment
  • Sufficient explanation for core features of
    autistic regression
  • Loss of social skills
  • Loss of vocalization
  • Gastrointestinal disease
  • Impairment of other CVO might be expected to
    contribute to these core losses and other
    abnormalities

46
Anatomical consistency
  • Observation social regression often precedes
    loss of vocalization (Goldberg 2003) and may be
    unaccompanied by loss of vocalization (Goldberg
    2003 Lord 2004)
  • Explanation no BBB at superior aspect of NTS to
    impede toxin entry, but entry to DMV requires
    diffusion from AP or NTS

47
Parkinsonian parallels to autism
  • Environmental factors strongly suspected
  • Inflammation may be causative factor (Whitton
    2007)
  • Digestive symptoms frequent or dominant (Spellman
    1977), with disordered motility (Cersosimo 2008),
    lax GE sphincter and reflux in 61 (Bassotti
    1998)
  • DMV is consistent first site of pathology

48
Ramifying pathology of PD(Braak H., et al. Cell
Tissue Res 200431121-134)
49
Ramifying pathology of PD
50
Possible mechanisms for ramifying brain pathology
in autism
  • De-afferentiation may disturb the
  • development of higher brain structures
  • (Tanguay 1982 Gessaga 1986 Geva 2008)
  • OR
  • Cumulative effects of toxins / oxidative stress
  • OR
  • Diffusion of inflammatory cytokines produced
  • by CVO in response to toxicants

51
Microglial activation
  • Brainstem has highest microglial density
  • Many toxic exposures are associated with release
    of excitatory cytokines associated with neuronal
    cell loss (Mangano 2009)
  • TNF-a is an cytokine suspected to play a
    pathogenic role in PD (McCoy 2003), and may be
    significant in autism

52
TNF-a
  • Elevated in CSF of regressed cohort (Chez 2007)
    and cohort with 10/12 regressed (Zimmerman 2005)
  • High CSF/blood ratios suggest elevation due to
    increased brain production (Chez 2007)
  • AP and ME lack blood-CSF barrier as well as BBB
    (Broadwell 1983)

53
Endotoxin (LPS) model
  • LPS poorly transits BBB
  • Systemic LPS induces immediate robust TNF-a only
    in CVO and adjacent structures, most intensely in
    AP and ME
  • TNF-a expression in NTS at 1.5 hours, marked by
    18 hours
  • TNF-a absent in DMV initially, but present at 18
    hours (Breder 1994)

54
Inflammatory toxins
  • Cadmium potently stimulates inflammatory
    cytokines, including TNF-a (Souza 2004)
  • MSG increases TNF-a in brain which is unprotected
    by BBB, with resulting neuronal death
    (Chaparro-Huerta 2002)
  • Paraquat increases LPS-stimulated TNF-a from
    monocytes x18 (Erroi 1992)
  • Inorganic mercury accumulation in CVO associates
    with increased glia (Vahter 1994)

55
Cytokine transmission via CSF
  • A pattern of inflammatory cytokine diffusion
    along nerve bundles suggests a diffusion pathway
    along small channels outside myelinated axons
    (Agnati 1995)
  • Experimentally, cytokines circulate from lateral
    ventricle via white matter nerve bundles of the
    corpus callosum, external capsule and striatum
    all the way to the amygdala (Vitkovic 2000)

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57
Carboxyethylpyrrole (CEP)
Evans TA, et al., Am J Biochemistry and
Biotechnology 20084(2)61-72.
58
Predicted threshold effects
  • Oxidative stressregardless of causewould lower
    neurophysiological threshold for regression
    resulting from toxic effects on CVO
  • 1. Additive to oxidative neurotoxicity
  • of CVO-preferential toxins
  • 2. Cholinergicespecially muscarinic
  • systems are particularly sensitive to
  • oxidative stress

59
Implications of site-specificity
  • Regressive threshold may be reached by isolated
    or cumulative exposure to one compound, or
    additive/cumulative exposures to distinct
    compounds.
  • Impaired development or function of CVO by
    gestational or first-year factors not modulated
    directly by BBB would lower the threshold for
    regression triggered by CVO-preferential toxins
    after BBB maturation.

60
Possible gestational influences
  • Vulnerable period for thalidomide as risk factor
    for autism (20-24 days) corresponds to the timing
    of formation of the medullary motor nuclei
    (Rodier 1997)
  • Cord-blood levels of mercury correlate with
    decreased autonomic activation of heart rate and
    brainstem auditory evoked potentials (Grandjean
    2004)

61
CVO studies
  • Morphology
  • Receptor density
  • Oxidative modification
  • Cytokine levels
  • Toxin levels
  • Vagus
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