Guest guest Posted July 30, 2007 Report Share Posted July 30, 2007 At 07:38 AM 7/30/07, you wrote: >I Can Vouch For The Pain Of " New Autism " . >Posted by: " Jagannath Chatterjee " jagchat01 jagchat01 >Sun Jul 29, 2007 6:13 pm (PST) >Dear Friends, > >I can vouch for what Dr Bryan says, as he describes the " new autism " . The >gut, the entire nervous and neuro-muscular system, the brain are severely >affected. It is very difficult to accurately describe what goes on. >Imagine all sorts of boring insects gnawing at your innards and wasps, >flies and mosquitoes bothering you from the outside and you may come near. > >An autistic feels his entire nervous system all the time, mostly because >of the pain. The pain in the guts and inflammatory brain pains are >simultaneous. The brain feels jammed with accessing the memory a >tantalising inch away. You feel your entire memory may be wiped out at any >moment and the brain may just flicker out and die leaving you a total blank. > >The soles become extremely sensitive and painful, hence the tendency to >walk on the toes. This sort of stretching also relieves the neuro-muscular >pain for some time. The head banging, moving around in circles, is due to >the awesome intestinal colic that is madding. Sometimes this colic appears >in the solar plexus region forcing you to bend double. > >You are past caring leading to the fearless state that autistic's exhibit. >What could be worse than this, is the underlying thought. People, even >God, say there is a limit to pain. Try telling that to an autistic. Never >ending pain is the only thing that is constant in his life. > >The guts loose the ability to retain stools. All emotions are reflected in >the guts leading to a further deterrioration of the situation. Even a >slight anxiety necessitates a rush to the toilet. > >You feel tired and exhausted all the time. Even sleep exhausts. You >desparately try to escape the hell hole that is life but you do not know how. > >It is very difficult to tackle even ordinary situations. You get used to a >certain pattern with great difficulty and when things change, ever more >subtly, you panic at the thought of having to re-adjust once again. Change >is anathema to the autistic. Even the thought of being cured may be >daunting for a cure may mean a different world, a world about which you >have no idea. > >Your moods, your symptoms, your fears change all the time.Each day is new >and brings a fresh set of problems. If change is what you hate, change is >what you get. This is an irrefutable law of life and autistics cannot >escape it. > >You do not want to face the world outside. It is full of unexpected tricks >and turns. Coupled with an affected gut, the situation makes even the >thought of travel break into a cold sweat. At times of stress such as >these the memory may suffer a total blackout. On two occasions I have >alighted at a station with no idea of who I am and what I was doing there. >A very frightening situation, I can assure you. Meeting strangers is >difficult because you don't have them mapped out in your brain. > >The depression never lifts. You often feel like retiring to a corner of a >dark room and curling up. The external world being so frightening, the >autistic creates a world within and is happy there. > >The worst thing is, you know. You know your difficulties, you know your >shortcomings, and in my case, I know what caused it. You also know that >you are not supposed to be like this. That you ought to be normal. That >you ARE normal but this malfunctioning body and brain comes in between. >When this feeling becomes overwhelming you snap. You go crazy. You scream, >you cry, you hurt others, you run away. You are termed a schizophrenic. > >You are not free of pain even in your sleep. You dream of even greater >pain. You dream of not being able to do what others do sans a thought. You >dream of facing exams without a shred of memory in your brain. You dream >of doing the wrong thing even as you know what is right. Your dreams are >full of anxiety. Such dreams rob you of the much required rest and you get >up feeling frightened and totally exhausted. > >Oh, how wonderful it would be to simply vanish and not exist. There would >be less trouble for yourself, your care givers, and the world in general. >The autistic is only too acutely aware that he is a burden unto others. >The problem is accentuated by a tremendous sense of duty, a great desire >to care for others, a love for work, a struggle to be perfect. The intense >battle that rages relentlessly within is often lost in the expressionless >face of the autistic. > >This is a peep into the world of autism. This is the autism that only the >sufferer knows. This is the " new autism " that Dr Bryan speaks of, the >latest gift of medical science to the world's children, and some adults. > >God bless them, even though they know what they are doing. > >Regards, >Jagannath. > >Deseret Morning News, Friday, July 27, 2007 >Author focuses on 'new autism' >By Elaine Jarvik > >Deseret Morning News > >http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,695195442,00.html >Here's what Dr. Bryan Jepson thought he knew about autism six years ago: >that it was a rare, genetic, developmental, untreatable brain disorder. >But that's the " old autism, " he says. > >Bryan Jepson > >Jepson, who graduated from the University of Utah School of Medicine in >1995, says what he knew about autism then he mostly learned from the movie > " Rain Man. " Later, in 2001, his lovable, happy 18-month-old baby began to >change — to " fade away, " as Jepson puts it. The toddler no longer wanted >to be read to, wouldn't look his parents in the eye and liked to spin in >circles in the middle of the floor. > >A child psychiatrist told Jepson and his wife, Laurie, " Prepare yourself >for the time when Aaron will need to be institutionalized. Forget >experimental therapies. " > >Instead, Laurie Jepson took to the Internet. And before long, her husband >— who categorizes himself as a " mainstream " physician — was deep in >medical literature about the biochemistry of autism. Soon he was convinced >that autism is a complex metabolic disease that has as much to do with the >gut as it does with the brain. > >Bryan Jepson, who is now director of medical services at Thoughtful House >Center for Children in Austin, Texas, is back in Utah this week to talk >about his new book, " Changing the Course of Autism: A Scientific Approach >for Parents and Physicians. " On Saturday, he will speak at a free workshop >sponsored by Porter's Hope, a Utah-based company that assists the families >of children diagnosed with autism. > > " All of a sudden, there's an explosion of autistic kids, " Jepson says. As >recently as 1980, autism was rare, with a rate of about 1 in 5,000. Now, >he says, it's 1 in 160. > >It's an epidemic, he says, " and there's no such thing as a genetic epidemic. " > >At the same time, the " new autism " is less likely to show up within the >first six months or year of a baby's life, and is much more likely to be > " regressive, " showing up at 18 months to 3 years to rob the child of >previous skills — sometimes almost overnight, sometimes as a gradual decline. > >There's a genetic susceptibility for autism. But something else has to >explain the sudden rise in numbers — and it's not simply a matter of >better diagnosis or a broader definition of what autism means, he says. > >The answer appears to have something to do with the increased toxicity of >the environment, he says, from food additives to vaccines and antibiotics. >Children who are born with a genetic susceptibility for autism have >trouble detoxifying, he says. > >The increase in other chronic diseases such as asthma is evidence that >autistic children may also be proof of what's to come, he says. " It's kind >of like the canary in the coal mine. " > >Already, he says, the treatments he uses have helped children with >attention-deficit hyperactive disorder, or ADHD, as well as autism. He >believes that eventually the knowledge of how autism works will affect our >understanding of conditions such as chronic fatigue, dementia and Parkinson's. > >Jepson's book is a review of scientific studies conducted by the Autism >Research Institute, whose founder, Bernard Rimland, was " the first to put >the puzzle pieces together, " Jepson says. The book also examines studies >done by independent scientists. > >Many primary-care physicians and pediatricians are not up-to-date on the >latest research, he says, " and it's hard to do autism in the 15 minutes " >allocated for many doctor visits. Jepson, who founded the Children's >Biomedical Center of Utah before moving in 2006 to Texas, says he knows of >only two Utah doctors who are currently treating autism as a medical >disease rather than a behavioral disorder. > >Calling autism a behavioral disorder, says Jepson, is like calling a tumor >a headache. Instead, he says, autism is just one symptom of a disease >process that affects the digestive, immune and neurological systems. > >The majority of children with autism have gastrointestinal problems, >sometimes causing severe pain. Their tantrums and head banging may be a >manifestation of pain they can't articulate, Jepson says. If the gut >disease is treated — with diet, nutritional supplements and medication — >that behavior goes away. > > " Your gut is an immune organ, and it can trigger inflammation elsewhere in >the body, including the brain, " he explains. " And it's a big source of >your metabolism. If it's not working right, you're not getting the >appropriate amount of nutrients from your food, and you're not preventing >toxic exposures as you otherwise would. " > >The sooner children are put on aggressive >gastrointestinal-immune-detoxification treatment, the more likely they are >to recover, he says. There's still no cure, he says, but the vast majority >improve. The Jepsons' son has gone from " pretty severe to pretty moderate. " > >E-mail: jarvik > >© 2007 Deseret News Publishing Company > >What if a “dirty bomb” exploded over a large segment of U.S.population >that simultaneously exposed citizens to Hepatitis B,Hepatitis A, tetanus, >pertussis, diphtheria, three strains of polio viruses, three strains of >influenza, measles, mumps, and rubella viruses, two types of meningitis, >four strains of herpes viruses, the chickenpox virus, 7 strains of >Streptococcus bacteria, and four strains of rotavirus. > >• We would declare a national emergency. >• It would be an “extreme act of BIOTERRORISM >• The public outcry would be immense and our government would react >accordingly. > >And yet, those are the very organisms we inject into our babies and our >small children in multiple doses, with immature, underdeveloped >immunesystems, many at the same time with vaccines. >But instead of bioterrorism, we call it “protection.” Reflect on that irony. > >- Dr Sheri Tenpenny, MD ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. 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