http://www.healing-arts.org/children/vaccines/vaccines-
demyelination.htm#demyelination
Vaccine Induced Demyelination
Myelination is an essential part of human brain development. Nerves can only
conduct pulses of energy efficiently if covered by myelin. Like insulation
on an electric wire, the fatty coating of myelin keeps the pulses confined
and maintains the integrity of the electrical signal so that it has a high
signal-to-noise ratio. When the insulation on a wire is damaged or
destroyed, the flow of electrical current may be interrupted and a
short-circuit occurs. Oligodendrocyte cells give white matter its color by
manufacturing myelin. If myelin falls into disrepair, nerve axons cease to
function, even though they themselves aren't damaged. Protecting
oligodendrocytes after brain or spinal cord injury might keep nerve cells
intact. At birth, relatively few pathways have myelin insulation.
Myelination in the human brain continues from before birth until at least 20
years of age. Up until the age of 10 or so, vast areas of the cortex are not
yet myelinated. Up to the age of 20, large areas of the frontal lobes are
not yet myelinated.1 Myelination begins in thedevelopmentally oldest parts
of the brain, like the brain stem, moving to the areas of the nervous system
that have developed more recently, like the prefrontal lobe and cortex.
Myelin spreads throughout the nervous system in stages, which vary slightly
in each individual. Impairment of myelination can alter neural communication
without necessarily causing severe CNS (central nervous system) damage. The
prefrontal portions of the cerebrum have a profound influence on human
behavior.2 If an individual is injected with vaccines, most of which have
adjuvants like mercury and aluminum compounds, as well as foreign proteins
(some from other species in which the vaccines were grown) and biological
organisms, unprotected nerves may be impacted.
The argument for a role of vaccines in the development of
autistic disorders hinges on these biological effects upon nerves, damaging
them in a way that influences behavior and learning patterns. The argument
for adjuvants evoking an auto-immune response does not hinge on any inherent
neuro-toxicity of these compounds, but on the initiation of an allergic
response. The model by which adjuvants initiate an immune response is that
of Experimental Allergic Encephalomyelitis (EAE). To date, EAE is recognized
as the best available animal model of several degenerative human diseases,
like multiple sclerosis and post-vaccinal encephalopathies. EAE3 is
generally thought to be an autoimmune response to myelin basic protein (MBP).
Oddly, MBP can also suppress EAE, and many observations suggest that an
independent immune response to so-called "adjuvant" material is also
necessary to EAE induction. Of course, this is why adjuvants are used in
vaccines, to dramatically increase the likelihood of an immune response to
the administered biological material. Thus, EAE may be a result of a pair of
interactive immune responses, one against MBP, and one against the adjuvant.
If so, the adjuvant should, like MBP, suppress EAE. Root-Bernstein, et al.
(1986) presented data from experiments on strain 13 guinea pigs
demonstrating EAE suppression by muramyl dipeptide, an active component of
complete Freund's adjuvant. In the past, adjuvants have only been classified
as immunopotentiators, not immunosuppressants. Apparently, adjuvants are
both. This study strengthens the argument that adjuvants may be crucial to
initiating an auto-immune response leading to post-vaccine neurological
symptoms.

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