First evidence of immune response targeting brain cells in autism

Gingerbeardman

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Autism spectrum disorders affect one in 59 American children by age eight. With no known quantitative biological features, autism diagnoses are currently based on expert assessments of behavioral symptoms, including impaired social skills and communication, repetitive behaviors and restricted interests.



In a paper published in Annals of Neurology, Matthew P. Anderson, MD, Ph.D., a physician-scientist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), and colleagues report the presence of cellular features consistent with an immune response targeting specialized brain cells in more than two thirds of autistic brains analyzed postmortem. These cellular characteristics—not previously observed in autism—lend critical new insight into autism's origins and could pave the way to improved diagnosis and treatment for people with this disorder.


"While further research is needed, determining the neuropathology of autism is an important first step to understanding both its causes and potential treatment," said Anderson, who is Chief of Neuropathology in the Department of Pathology at BIDMC and an Associate Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School. "Investigators typically aim potential treatments at specific pathologies in brain diseases, such as the tangles and plaques that characterize Alzheimer's disease and the Lewy bodies seen in Parkinson's. Until now, we have not had a promising target like that in autism."


Anderson was examining brains donated to Autism BrainNet, a non-profit tissue bank, when he noticed the presence of perivascular lymphocyte cuffs—an accumulation of immune cells surrounding blood vessels in the brain. He also noted mysterious bubbles or blisters that scientists call blebs accumulating around these cuffed blood vessels. Anderson and colleagues subsequently found these blebs contained debris from a subset of brain cells called astrocytes.


Not previously linked to autism, perivascular lymphocyte cuffing is a well-known indicator of chronic inflammation in the brain. Lymphocyte cuffs in the brain are telltale signs of viral infections or autoimmune disorders. But the pattern Anderson observed did not match any previously documented infection or autoimmune disorder of the brain. In the brains Anderson examined, the cuffs were subtle but distinct. "I've seen enough brains to know you shouldn't see that," he said.
 

Gingerbeardman

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So there we have it, a perfectly plausible mechanism for how vaccines would trigger an immune response that ends up causing brain damage in the process.

 

rietrot

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But is the damaged caused reversible? Now I would think it is as auto immune disorders tend to just be allergic reactions.
 

Gingerbeardman

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But is the damaged caused reversible? Now I would think it is as auto immune disorders tend to just be allergic reactions.
No, I don't think the damage would be reversible, it sounds like what was found was the remains of dead brain cells.

And auto-immune basically is when the immune system attacks the body itself. But yes, the body having an allergic reaction to a vaccination and taking out brain cells as a result would basically be the simplest explanation for why there's a connection between vaccinations and autism that just won't go away.
 

Techne

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Given the fact that there is a problem with repeatability in science, I'll wait for some more data. Plus, the correlations in the article are underwhelming.

Also, there are are many ways to trigger an autoimmune response. No doubt vaccines is one of them. The way these responses are generated makes it nearly impossible to predict with good certainty vaccines are the main cause when it comes to autism conditions.
 
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