Previous
posts showed how pollen allergies can lead to summertime flare-ups in autism;
most noticeable are violent/aggressive behaviours, but there is actually much
more going on.
I
established that Verapamil, the calcium channel blocker, and surprisingly also a
mast cell stabilizer, can very effectively extinguish the aggression, but without
really solving the usual allergy symptoms like itchy eyes. As a result, you need to use a convention
anti-allergy treatment as well.
Asthma/Pollen Hot Spots
Any asthma
suffer will be able to tell you about the places that make them feel worse and
the places that places that reduce their symptoms. It seems that pine forests high in the
mountains and on certain coastlines are best.
Forested
areas around cities are not good for asthma, Berlin being an example. So you can
easily check if you live in an asthma hot spot, or in a better place.
Cognitive Impairment
We just
spent two weeks under the olive trees beside the sea in Greece, which I would
classify as a low pollen location.
Having returned home to a big city and a house directly opposite a forest,
we could see the effect of an asthma/pollen hot spot.
Monty, aged
11 with ASD, mild pollen allergy and mild asthma, did change his behaviour
almost immediately.
The
Verapamil does continue to block aggressive behaviour, but what changed was an immediate
return of mild atopic dermatitis (red patches behind knees) and what Monty’s
brother Ted, aged 14, described as Monty became “more stupid”. It is not a nice way to describe it, but when
you look closely, it is there. The
allergy has effectively lowered his cognitive function. It is very easy to check, just ask some
simple maths questions or memory questions (what did you have for breakfast?). It is as if he is very mildly intoxicated
(drunk), he is not staggering around, but he is not as sharp as he was in
Greece, or at home in the spring.
Faced with
an aggressive child, the last thing you would bother about is how good he is at
mental maths, and so you would probably never notice it. But having solved the aggression we are left
with the observation that the allergy causes some temporary cognitive
impairment. I say temporary, because if
you take away the allergens, everything improves and returns to where it was.
What is going on?
We know that
allergens cause mast cell degranulation, which releases histamine, IL-6, and
other pro-inflammatory substances in a chain reaction. We know that these cross the BBB (blood brain
barrier) where there are several types of histamine receptor. The body has at least 4 types: - H1, H2, H3
and H4, and maybe more not yet identified.
Typical
anti-histamines only block H1, and the newer ones are specifically designed not
to cross the BBB, so as not to make you drowsy.
We later discovered that most H1 anti-histamines have moderate mast cell
stabilizing properties, meaning they do reduce the release of histamine itself.
Calcium channel
signaling is known to be disturbed in autism and there is excess physical
calcium found in the autistic brain.
This did suggest that modifying calcium channel behaviour might be of
benefit. A known genetic variation in
autism does affect the L-type calcium channels.
This suggested that blocking the L-channels might be helpful. This was shown to be true in Timothy syndrome
and I showed it to be true in Monty.
Other
research has shown that Verapamil is an effective mast cell stabilizer, which
did come as a surprise.
Now we come
back to the effect of the allergy. If
untreated, it will “dumb down” the child and also lead to extreme behaviours
like aggression, but also even odd physical tics, like moving the head forwards
and backwards like a pigeon.
Perhaps
there is a two stage process going on, which ultimately leads to the aberrant
signaling of the L-type calcium channels and aggression. Or is it just a progression from mild to
severe?
Is it a
coincidence that a calcium channel blocker can stabilize mast cells? I think it unlikely.
Autism as an Allergy of the Brain
The idea put
forward by Professor Theoharides, that autism is, at least in part, an allergy
of the brain, looks more and more valid. It was the subject of an earlier post.
I do wonder
how much mental retardation (MR) / cognitive impairment is also caused by the
same mechanism. Depending on how you
define “autism” and whose figures you use, between 20% and 50% of people with
autism have MR. MR is defined as an IQ
of 70 or less.
·
Mild
retardation: Mild
retardation: IQ level 50-55 to approximately 70 (85% of people with mental
retardation are in this category)
·
Moderate
retardation: IQ
level 35-40 to 50-55 (10% of people with mental retardation)
·
Severe
retardation: IQ
level 20-25 to 35-40 (3 - 4% of people with mental retardation)
·
Profound
retardation: IQ
level below 20 or 25 (1 - 2% of people with mental retardation)
I would
suggest that many people with autism might be “cognitively impaired” by allergies,
be they caused by pollen, cats, dust, food, detergents, pollution or anything
else. Maybe they just dropped from a potential
IQ of 120 to 110, or maybe they dropped from 80 to 35 and are now known as
severely retarded.
Verapamil treats more than aggression
and SIB
Based on my
sample of one, it would be conceivable that Verapamil merely treats aggression
and self-injurious behaviour (SIB), and that allergies are a side issue. But thanks to the feedback on this blog, it
is clear that Verapamil is treating the allergy. One reader gave very extensive feedback
showing how Verapamil greatly reduced her child’s GI problems (caused by food
intolerance/allergies) and improved behaviour.
So based on a sample of two, Verapamil’s effect does seem to be related
to mast cell degranulation and allergies.
Conclusion
I am very
happy to have discovered the benefits of Verapamil, but I will continue to look
into how further to reduce the “brain allergy effect”. Perhaps the allergy is somehow affecting the
excitatory/inhibitory balance of the Neurotransmitter GABA, I say this because
Monty’s behaviour somehow resembles life without Bumetanide.
Bumetanide’s role in autism is to lower brain
Cl- concentration and to switch GABA to be inhibitory. A recent comment on one of my Bumetanide posts
was from somebody highlighting a paper that questioned whether enough
Bumetanide crosses into the brain to switch GABA to be inhibitory.
Note that a recently published comprehensive review on the use of bumetanide in the treatment of neonatal seizures indicates that theres is no evidence to support the use of this drug in the treatment of central nervous system disorders via the NKCC1-dependent mechanism described above, as at the very low doses that are given to infants and children bumetanide does not reach sufficient levels in the brain.
direct link to the original review:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/epi.12620/pdf
It is conceivable that allergies affect the
blood brain barrier (BBB), although you might expect allergies to weaken the
BBB, rather than strengthen it; but the body does plenty of strange
things. So a second daily dose of
Bumetanide just might help. In France, the autism researchers working with
Bumetanide do give it twice a day.
The simplest
method to reduce the “brain allergy effect” would be to just avoid the
allergen(s). In the case of Monty, this would
be to go and live in a low pollen environment, and perhaps even avoid cats.
Since 30+%
of people with autism apparently suffer from asthma, then 30% of people with
autism might also find behavioral relief by avoiding pollen. Those suffering from aggression and SIB would
very likely benefit dramatically from Verapamil.
This might
also suggest that residential facilities for people with severe autism should
be in low pollen areas.
Incidentally,
our local special needs school used to be surrounded by a rampant overgrowth of
ragweed/ambrosia. This is one of the
most notorious plants for causing allergies in humans. The current number 1 in the ATP world tennis
rankings then gave them some money to tidy up the grounds. Coincidentally, like many of the “inmates”,
he also favors a gluten free diet.