http://www.greenmedinfo.com/blog/at...al-vaccines-turn-our-immune-system-against-us
Attacking Ourselves: Top Doctors Reveal Vaccines Turn Our Immune System Against Us
 Posted on: 
 Tuesday, February 24th 2015 at 6:45 pm
 Written By: 
 
Celeste McGovern
  
The  research is hard to ignore, vaccines can trigger  autoimmunity with a  laundry list of diseases to follow. With harmful  and toxic metals as  some vaccine ingredients, who is susceptible and  which individuals are  more at risk?
No one would accuse Yehuda  Shoenfeld of being a quack. The Israeli  clinician has spent more than  three decades studying the human immune  system and is at the pinnacle of  his profession. You might say he is  more foundation than fringe in his  specialty; he wrote the textbooks. 
The Mosaic of Autoimmunity, 
Autoantibodies, 
Diagnostic Criteria in Autoimmune Diseases, Infection and Autoimmunity, Cancer and Autoimmunity — the   list is 25 titles long and some of them are cornerstones of clinical   practice. Hardly surprising that Shoenfeld has been called the   "Godfather of Autoimmunology" — the study of the immune system turned on   itself in a wide array of diseases from type 1 diabetes to ulcerative   colitis and multiple sclerosis.  
But something strange is  happening in the world of immunology lately  and a small evidence of it  is that the Godfather of Autoimmunology is  pointing to 
vaccines   — specifically, some of their ingredients including the toxic metal   aluminum — as a significant contributor to the growing global epidemic   of autoimmune diseases. The bigger evidence is a huge body of research   that's poured in in the past 15 years, and particularly in the past five   years. Take for example, a recent 
article published in the journal 
Pharmacological Research   in which Shoenfeld and colleagues issue unprecedented guidelines  naming  four categories of people who are most at risk for  vaccine-induced  autoimmunity.
"On one hand," vaccines prevent infections which can  trigger  autoimmunity, say the paper's authors, Alessandra Soriano, of  the  Department of Clinical Medicine and Rheumatology at the Campus   Bio-Medico University in Rome, Gideon Nesher, of the Hebrew University   Medical School in Jerusalem and Shoenfeld, founder and head of the   Zabludowicz Center of Autoimmune Diseases in the Sheba Medical Center at   Tel Hashomer. He is also editor of three medical journals and author  of  more than 1,500 research papers across the spectrum of medical   journalism and founder of the International Congress on Autoimmunology.   "On the other hand, many reports that describe post-vaccination   autoimmunity strongly suggest that 
vaccines can indeed trigger autoimmunity.   Defined autoimmune diseases that may occur following vaccinations   include arthritis, lupus (systemic lupus erythematosus, SLE) diabetes   mellitus, thrombocytopenia, vasculitis, dermatomyosiositis,   Guillain-Barre syndrome and demyelinating disorders. Almost all types of   vaccines have been reported to be associated with the onset of ASIA."
ASIA — or Autoimmune/inflammatory Syndrome Induced by Adjuvants (also known as Shoenfeld's syndrome) -- first appeared in the 
Journal of Autoimmunology   four years ago. It is an umbrella term for a collection of similar   symptoms, including Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, that result after exposure   to an adjuvant — an environmental agent including common vaccine   ingredients that stimulate the immune system. Since then an enormous   body of research, using ASIA as a paradigm, has begun to unravel the   mystery of how environmental toxins, particularly the metal aluminum   used in vaccines, can trigger an immune system chain reaction in   susceptible individuals and may lead to overt autoimmune disease.
Autoimmune  disease results when the body's system meant to attack  foreign invaders  turns instead to attack part of the body it belongs to  (
auto  is Greek for self). If the immune system is like a  national defence  system, antibodies are like drones programmed to  recognize a certain  type of invader (a bacteria say) and to destroy  them or mark them for  destruction by other special forces.  Autoantibodies are like drones that  are misidentifying a component of  the human body and have launched a  sustained attack on it. If they  mistakenly target a component of the  conductive sheath around neurons,  for example, nerve impulses stop  conducting properly, muscles go into  spasm and coordination fails;  multiple sclerosis results. If  autoantibodies erroneously focus on joint  tissue; rheumatoid arthritis  results. If they target the islets of  Langerhans in the pancreas, Type 1  diabetes, and so on
"Throughout  our lifetime the normal immune system walks a fine line  between  preserving normal immune reactions and developing autoimmune  diseases,"  says the paper. "The healthy immune system is tolerant to  self-antigens.  When self-tolerance is disturbed, dysregulation of the  immune system  follows, resulting in emergence of an autoimmune disease.  Vaccination is  one of the conditions that may disturb this homeostasis  in susceptible  individuals, resulting in autoimmune phenomena and  ASIA."
Who is  "susceptible" is the subject of the paper entitled, "Predicting   post-vaccination autoimmunity: Who might be at risk?" It lists four   categories of people: 1) those who have had a previous autoimmune   reaction to a vaccine, 2) anyone with a medical history of autoimmunity,   3) patients with a history of allergic reactions, 4) anyone at high   risk of developing autoimmune disease including anyone with a family   history of autoimmunity, presence of autoantibodies which are detectable   by blood tests and other factors including low vitamin D and smoking.
PREVIOUS REACTION
Regarding  those who have had a  previous adverse reaction to vaccines, the paper  cites five relevant  studies including the case of a death of a teenage  girl six months  following her third 
Gardasil   injection against HPV virus.  She had experienced a range of symptoms   shortly after her first dose, including dizziness, numbness and  tingling  in her hands, and memory lapses. After her second injection,  she  developed "intermittent arm weakness, frequent tiredness requiring   daytime naps," worse tingling, night sweats, chest pain and   palpitations. A full autopsy was unrevealing but blood and spleen tissue   analysis revealed HPV-16 L1 gene DNA fragments — matching the DNA  found  in vials of the Gardasil vaccine against cervical cancer — "thus   implicating the vaccine as a causal factor." The DNA fragments had also   been found to be "complexed with the aluminum adjuvant" which,  according  to the report, have been shown to persist for up to 8 to 10  years  causing chronic immune system stimulation.
"Although data is  limited," Shoenfeld and his colleagues concluded, "it  seems preferable  that individuals with prior autoimmune or  autoimmune-like reactions to  vaccinations, should not be immunized, at  least not with the same type  of vaccine."
ESTABLISHED AUTOIMMUNE CONDITION
The second   group which the paper cites for vaccine exemption is patients with   "established autoimmune conditions." Vaccines don't work so well in   them, say Shoenfeld and his colleagues, and they are at "risk for flares   following vaccination." Inoculations that contain live viruses   including chickenpox, yellow fever and the measles, mumps and rubella   triple vaccine (MMR) are "generally contraindicated" for people with   autoimmune conditions because of  the risk of "uncontrolled viral   replication." But inactivated vaccines are not such a good idea either   because they usually contain the added ingredient aluminum, linked to   autoimmunity.
The immunologists describe recent studies in which  patients with  autoimmune rheumatic disease given the influenza vaccine  (without  aluminum) suffered more joint pain and fever than controls and  whose  levels of autoantibodies (the drones that attack self)  increased  after  receiving the flu vaccine. What's more, they developed new types  of  autoantibodies that weren't present before the vaccines, and those   persisted. As the presence of autoantibodies can be 
predictive of developing autoimmune disease in patients without symptoms, even years ahead of disease onset, this is troubling to those who understand immunology.
 A  number of studies claim vaccines are safe for the "overwhelming   majority of patients with established autoimmune diseases," the study   allows, but they only looked at rheumatoid arthritis and lupus and not   at severe and active cases so "the potential benefit of vaccination   should be weighed against its potential risk," they cautioned.
PATIENTS WITH A HISTORY OF ALLERGY
Vaccine   trials have usually excluded "vulnerable" individuals -- only extremely   healthy individuals with no allergies are recruited. It's a "selection   bias," say Soriano and Shoenfeld, and has likely resulted in serious   adverse events being "considerably underestimated" in "real life where   vaccines are mandated to all individuals regardless of their   susceptibility." The true incidence of allergic reactions to vaccines,   normally estimated at between one in 50,000 to one in a million doses,   is probably much higher and particularly where gelatin or egg proteins   are on the ingredients list, they say.
There's a long list of  vaccine ingredients that are potential  allergens: besides the infectious  agents themselves, there are those  from hen's egg, horse serum, baker's  yeast, numerous antibiotics,  formaldehyde and lactose, as well  "inadvertent" ingredients such as  latex. People's allergic histories  have to be taken before vaccination  say the researchers. But some signs  of reaction don't show up until  after the shot.
The public health  nurse or GP might tell patients that a long-lasting  swelling around the  injection site after a vaccine is a normal  reaction, for example. But  that is not what the immunologists say.  "[A]luminum sensitization  manifests as nodules [hard lumps] at the  injection site that often  regress after weeks or months, but may  persist for years." In such  cases, they say, a patch test can be done  to confirm sensitivity and to  avoid vaccination.
According to a growing body of research, though, allergy may be only the beginning of many dangerous aluminum-induced phenomena.
THE TROUBLE WITH ALUMINUM
Aluminum  has been  added to vaccines since about 1926 when Alexander Glenny and  colleagues  noticed it would produce better antibody responses in  vaccines than  the antigen alone. Glenny figured the alum was inducing  what he called a  "depot effect" — slowing the release of the antigen and  heightening  the immune response. For 60 years his theory was accepted  dogma. And  over the same time, the vaccine schedule grew decade on  decade, but few  ever questioned the effects of injecting aluminum into  the body, which  is strange considering its known toxicity.
A  PubMed search on aluminum and "toxicity" turns up 4,258 entries. Its   neurotoxicity is well documented. It affects memory, cognition,   psychomotor control; it damages the blood brain barrier, activates brain   inflammation, depresses mitochondrial function and plenty of research   suggests it is a key player in the formation of the amyloid "plaques"   and tangles in the brains of Alzheimer's patients. It's been implicated   in 
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and autism and demonstrated to 
induce allergy.
When kidney dialysis patients were accidentally infused with aluminum, the 
"dialysis-induced encephalopathy"   (DAE) they developed neurological symptoms: speech abnormalities,   tremors, memory loss, impaired concentration and behavioural changes.   Many of the patients eventually went into comas and died. The lucky ones   survived: when the source of toxicity, aluminum, was removed from  their  dialysis they recovered rapidly.
With these new observations,  researchers began investigating the  adjuvant effects of aluminum and in  the past decade there has been a  flurry of 
research.   Far from being a sandbag that holds the antigen for a while and then   gets excreted, it turns out that aluminum salts trigger a storm of   defence action. Within hours of injection of the same aluminum   oxyhydroxide in vaccines into mice, for example, armies of specialized   immune cells are on the move, calling in grid coordinates for more   specialist assault forces. Within a day, a whole host of immune system   commandos are in play -- neutrophils, eosinophils, inflammatory   monocytes, myeloid and dendritic cells, activating lymphocytes and   secreting proteins called cytokines. The cytokines themselves cause   collateral damage but they send out signals, directing cell-to-cell   communication and recruiting other cells into action. If the next phase   of the attack is launched: fibroblast growth factor, interferons,   interleukins, platelet derived growth factor, transforming growth factor   and tumour necrosis factor might all be engaged. There's evidence that   poorly understood and pesky inflammasomes, (currently a topic of   cutting- edge 
cancer causation research)  such as the Nod-like receptor 3( NLRP) are activated too, but it's all  still too early to say exactly what they're doing.