Abstract:
Autism is a common term for a number of overlapping syndromes.
It has no standard or universally accepted form of treatment,
and parents and practitioners alike have access to numerous therapies
in trying to improve a child’s autism spectrum disorder (A.S.D.).
The use of these other therapies has significant implications
for homoeopathic treatment. Some approaches, such as dietary changes,
can be combined relatively easily with homoeopathy; others, such
as chelation or neuroleptic drugs, can make homoeopathic prescribing
almost impossible. If homoeopaths wish to effectively help the
A.S.D.-affected children who increasingly present at their clinics,
it is important to be familiar with these other competing and
often antagonistic strategies and the impact they may have on
their homeopathic treatment.
Contents
- Introduction
- Biomedical Interventions
- The Biomedical Approach: What is It?
- The Biomedical Approach: Four Categories
i. Intervention 1: Dietary Modification
ii. Intervention 2: Optimisation
of Gastrointestinal Function
iii. Intervention 3: Supplementation
and Medicinals
iv. Intervention 4: Detoxification
and Chelation
- Sounds Impressive, But Does it Work?
- Harmful and Aggravating Effects
i. Problem 1: Yeast Overgrowth
ii. Problem 2: Candida “Die-Off”
iii. Problem 3: Chelation Side-Effects
iv. Problem 4: Nutritional Imbalances,
Deficiencies, and Intolerances
- Homeopathic Perspective on Biomedical Problems
i. Dietary Modifications
ii. Supplementation
iii. Yeast Overgrowth
iv. Chelation
- Homeopathy and Biomedicine Compared
- Implications of the Biomedical Approach
for Homeopathic Treatment
i. Symptoms are Suppressed or Altered
ii. Artificial Symptoms are Produced
iii. The Biomedical Family
- Making the Transition
i. Biomedical Dependency
ii. Biomedicine’s Sophisticated
Appearance
iii. Fear
iv. Misidentification of Homeopathy
v. Prior Investment
vi. Assisting the Transition
- Biomedicine or Homeopathy?
- Other Interventions
- Orthodox Pharmaceutical Approach
- Behavioural Therapies
- Neurosensory Approach
- Psychodynamic Approach
- Miscellaneous
- To be Continued
Introduction
Autism is a common term for a number of overlapping
syndromes. It has no standard or universally accepted form of
treatment, and parents and practitioners alike have access to
numerous therapies in trying to improve a child’s autism spectrum
disorder (A.S.D.). The use of these other therapies has significant
implications for homœopathic treatment.
Some approaches, such as dietary changes, can be combined relatively
easily with homœopathy; others, such
as chelation or neuroleptic drugs, can make homœopathic prescribing almost impossible. If we, as homœopaths, wish to effectively help the A.S.D.-affected children
who increasingly present at our clinics, it is important to be
familiar with these other competing and often antagonistic strategies
and the impact they may have on our treatment.
I have grouped the most common approaches currently in use under
the following headings:
1. Biomedical (or biochemical)
2. Orthodox medicine
3. Behavioural
4. Neurosensory
5. Psychodynamic
6. Miscellaneous.
Of these, the biomedical approach is likely
to be the most disruptive to homœopathic
treatment. For this reason, a considerable part of this article
is devoted to explaining its interventions and the ramifications
they have for both patient and homœopath.
Biomedical interventions
The Biomedical Approach: What is It?
Biomedicine is a term that can be applied to
almost any form of “medical” practice. Merck defines it as “Clinical
medicine based on the principles of the natural sciences such
as biology and biochemistry”.1 When used in relation to the treatment
of A.S.D.s, it refers to a complicated
and developing field on the periphery of orthodox medicine and
allied therapies that as of yet has no clearly defined boundary.
It seeks to correct biochemical imbalances that disrupt immunological,
neurological, digestive, or metabolic processes to create A.S.D.
symptoms. To make these corrections, biomedicine may introduce
dietary changes; seek to optimise digestion with anti-fungal medications,
antibiotics, or probiotics; supplement with vitamins, minerals, and enzymes;
detoxify the system by a range of substances; or prescribe medicines
to chelate heavy metals out of the body.
These interventions are generally guided by the behaviours of
the child and the reports from genetic-, salivary-, blood-, urinary-,
fæcal-, or hair-mineral tests.
The relevance of this to the homœopath
lies in biomedical interventions’ capacity to complicate homœopathic
treatment by suppressing [a] symptoms or by producing new ones
as “side-effects”. This, with parents unfamiliar with homœopathic
concepts and unlikely to suspend biomedical treatment in favour
of homœopathy alone, can make the management of the “biomedical”
child particularly challenging. Homoeopathic treatment of such
a child will certainly be less clearcut
than that of a child not having these interventions; at times,
it may even be impossible.
The Four Categories
For the sake of convenience, I have grouped
the most common biomedical interventions into the following four
categories in the order of their common implementation:
· dietary
modification;
· optimisation
of gastrointestinal function;
· supplementation; and
· detoxification
and chelation.At this point I will provide
an uncritical explanation of each, leaving discussion of its benefits,
limitations, and drawbacks for later.
Intervention 1: Dietary Modification
The brain and gut are closely linked. Both differentiate
from the neural crest during embryologic development, and a preserved
link allows them to exert reciprocal regulatory influences on
each other later in life: what affects one will affect the other.2
The gut, with many of the same neurotransmitters as the brain
and more neurons than the spinal cord, is often called the “second
brain”. Many cells of the immune system also reside within the
gut to play a major role in immune function. With this knowledge,
we are not surprised to find that many A.S.D. children suffer
from combined neurodevelopmental problems, gastrointestinal disorders, and
lowered immunity.
As the brain-gut connection has been increasingly
understood, modifying the diet to remove sensitising or irritating
factors has become a major part of the biomedical treatment of
autism. It is the platform upon which all other biomedical interventions
rest.
Dietary modification consists of three components.
First, irritating chemicals such as artificial additives, flavourings,
colourings, and preservatives are removed from the diet, along
with highly processed foods of little nutritional value.
The second component of dietary modification
is the start of a series of biomedical interventions based on
allopathic [b] rationale. Dairy products, with their casein content,
and gluten-containing foods such as wheat, oats, rye, barley,
and spelt are removed from the diet. This is done to prevent any
undigested gluten or casein peptides from entering the bloodstream,
on the basis of a hypothesis that many children with autism have
increased gastrointestinal permeability (often known by the more
colourful name of “leaky gut”) that allows undigested casein and
gluten peptides to leak into the bloodstream and then circulate
to the brain to produce opiate-like effects, including confusion,
vagueness, and disorientation - all common symptoms of autism.
The third dietary modification restricts foods
that contain sugars or refined carbohydrates. Potentially harmful
bacteria such as streptococcus; some viruses; and yeasts such
as Candida are fuelled by sugars in the gut to create a state
of gut dysbiosis - an excess of certain
naturally occurring microbes or parasites. It is thought within
biomedical circles that toxins produced by these microorganisms
are absorbed into the bloodstream to again affect the brain, and
that the dietary restriction of refined carbohydrates and sugars,
including those found in fruit and some vegetables, helps to prevent
or control these overgrowths.
The above are the main dietary modifications
of the biomedical approach, but there are several others. Children
may also be on a low-phenol, low-oxalate, or low-salicylate
diet; the Feingold diet; the Gut and Psychology Syndrome (GAPS)
diet; or the Specific Carbohydrate diet, to name just a few.3
Intervention 2: Optimisation of Gastrointestinal
Function
In a healthy state, the gut absorbs nutrients
and screens out toxins. If the “leaky gut” hypothesis is correct,
it is unable to do either of these two things. The biomedical
approach of returning the gut to health involves removing parasites,
yeasts, viruses, and toxins and replacing any health-disturbing
bacteria with those that are beneficial. To this end, probiotics are combined with the dietary changes already discussed.
Antibiotics and anti-fungals are used
to “eradicate” unwanted colonies of micro-organisms, and supplementation
and chelation of heavy metals may be used in at attempt to reduce
gut inflammation and promote healing. (Supplementation and chelation are discussed more in following paragraphs.)
Intervention 3: Supplementation and Medicinals
Biomedicine also uses vitamins, minerals, amino
acids, enzymes, hormones, antioxidants, and essential fatty acids
- frequently in mega-doses - to treat deficiencies from poor digestion,
or to improve immune, metabolic, digestive, and neurological function.
Calcium, magnesium, vitamin C, vitamin E, vitamin B5 (pantothenic
acid), vitamin B6, methyl B12, melatonin, taurine, dimethylglycine
(DMG), pycnogenol, GABA, and fish oil are just some of the more
common supplements and medicines prescribed from an extensive
and ever-growing list.
Intervention 4: Detoxification and Chelation
It is claimed that chelation
is the only means by which some children with autism can be stimulated
to excrete retained deposits of mercury, lead, arsenic, and other
heavy metals from the body. They may also be affected by one or
more of the persistent organic pollutants (POPs) that now contaminate
our environment. These include: polyaromatic hydrocarbons and
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs); aldrin;
chlordane; DDT; dieldrin; endrin; heptachlor;
and brominated flame retardants. Biomedically,
numerous chelating agents and supplements are used to try to relieve
any toxic burden these children may carry. They include: dimercaptosuccinic
acid (DMSA); 2,3-Dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid (DMPS); ethylenediaminetetraacetic
acid (EDTA); vitamin C; glutathione; and alpha-lipoic
acid (ALA), along with several others.
Sounds Impressive, But Does It Work?
The biomedical model for the treatment of autism
is a relatively new and unusual phenomenon: new because the escalating
incidence of autism is only recent (1990s onward4), and unusual
because biomedical practitioners and their protocols have been,
and continue to be, informed by the discoveries of parents who
push beyond the limits of orthodox medicine in a desperate bid
to find new and better treatment options.5 This “newness” means
that very little empirical research is available to scientifically
substantiate the claims made by biomedical proponents. Most reports
on its effectiveness are anecdotal; though they may be correct,
they lack statistical context and often, to a degree, personal
medical history. Members of the global A.S.D. community have,
out of necessity, had to disseminate home-tested, trial-and-error
information on various protocols and strategies between themselves.
The immediacy of the Internet; the over-the-counter availability
of many medications; and access to the necessary laboratory tests
have meant that this parent-to-parent information frequently outstrips
the knowledge and protocols of the emerging biomedical practitioners.
As a result, many parents assume sole responsibility
for the biomedical treatment of their child. This is evidenced
by the increasing number of biomedical self-help groups around
the world; their associated non-profit organizations6; and heavily
populated biomedical Internet forums7. Lorence, in examining Asperger’s
syndrome and the role of these Internet communities, says:
We find that users of web-based information
in such areas often report reliance on information for medical
decision making and disease management, at times to the point
where interaction becomes a form of “cybertherapy”. Further, such groups often evolve into disease-specific,
‘virtual support groups’, even where discussions highlight a lack
of consensus regarding the role, function and quality of information
within this unique domain.8
Parents who experience gains with biomedical
treatment report that their child improves in one or more of the
following areas: receptive or expressive language; socialization;
behaviour; immunity; and digestive function. All confirm that
it is a slow process, and most agree that dietary changes produce
the fastest and most consistent improvements. They are clearly
also the simplest and safest to initiate.
The biomedical model may appear to be a saviour
for some with autism, but the improvements it offers are not consistent
over time or even between children of the same parents. For every
parent who reports success, another will report failure. Some
children will be classified as “non-responders” to treatment;
of greater concern, some will regress.9 Biomedicine’s treatments
are still evolving, and “best practices” are yet to be defined.
Its nebulous grasp on the treatment of autism is revealed in the
following words from the Autism Research Unit of the University
of Sunderland, UK:
We are gradually approaching an understanding
about some of the biological factors which underlie autism and
from this we are beginning to develop therapies which appear rational.
However, we are still unable to predict with any real confidence
how individuals are going to react to the treatments we employ.10
Harmful and Aggravating Effects
It is important to realize that though the “bio”
of biomedicine may sound green, clean, and natural, the “medicine”
remains deeply allopathic. Most of the treatments depend, for
their effect, on biochemical palliation [c] or suppression of
symptoms, neither of which will remove the totality of the child’s
symptoms.[d] The treatments can also produce harmful or aggravating
side effects. The following are four of many such problems.
Problem 1: Yeast overgrowth
An overgrowth of yeast in the gut is the expected
side-effect of the chelating agents, antivirals,
and antibiotics used during biomedical treatment. According to
the “leaky gut” hyypothesis, yeast overgrowth, of which Candida is the most
common, increases gut permeability, allowing undigested peptides
and toxins into the bloodstream. When such overgrowth is triggered
or compounded by chelation, the results can include unbearable itching of the
skin and muscles; skin rashes; ear infections; hyperactivity;
“stims”[e]; agitation; aggression; abdominal bloating; flatulence;
and diarrhoea. Behavioural and cognitive regression can also occur,
and the child’s autism may even deepen. To forestall or treat
these symptoms, anti-yeast and anti-fungal medications, such as
Diflucan (fluconazole),
Sporanox (itraconazole), and nystatin may
be prescribed; a yeast- and sugar-free diet that “starves” the
yeast implemented; or probiotics introduced
to “crowd” the yeast out. This layering effect, designed to treat
the original iatrogenesis, may or may not be effective but can in turn
produce its own problems, including liver and kidney damage. There
is also a high risk of the yeast returning in a resistant form
upon cessation of treatment. And so, in allopathic fashion, the
cycle of symptoms and treatment commences again. A cursory look
at biomedical forums reveals many once-hopeful parents struggling
to control yeast in their children in a never-ending cycle of
symptoms and treatment.
Problem 2: Candida “die-off”
At the other end of the scale, a “die-off” effect,
known as the Herxheimer reaction11,
frequently occurs as the yeast is starved or poisoned by prescribed
supplements, dietary restrictions, or anti-fungals.
When this occurs, toxins released by the dying yeast produce a
range of symptoms, including hyperactivity; stims; fatigue; brain fog; fever; nausea; gas; bloating; diarrhoea
or constipation; abdominal pain; itching; and muscle or joint
soreness. Symptoms usually start seven to 12 days after the commencement
of treatment. Rather than acknowledging it as the toxic event
it really is, die-off is usually presented to parents as an innocuous
“detoxing” process. This ignores the
fact that the child’s total toxin load is obviously increased
rather than reduced during this event and that there is no evidence
of increased excretion of existing toxins either during or following
the symptoms. Biomedicine will use supplements such as molybdenum,
and treatments such as pantethine, activated
charcoal, and peppermint oil to try to palliate die-off symptoms.
Problem 3: Chelation
Side-Effects
Children with autism often have high levels
of heavy metals such as mercury, lead, arsenic, cadmium, copper,
nickel, antimony, and aluminium within their system. These metals
have all been implicated in causing either neurological damage
or gut inflammation. Of them all, mercury has attracted the most
attention in biomedical circles. The symptoms of mercury poisoning
can be similar to those of autism12, and the opportunities for
exposure, either in utero or during
infancy, are numerous.[f]
Biomedicine uses a range of supplements and
chelating agents to loosen and extract heavy metals, including
mercury, from the body, but if toxic side effects are to be avoided,
chelation has to be carefully managed.
Reversible bone-marrow suppression and elevated liver enzymes,
indicating liver damage, have been noted in about 1% of cases.
Severe allergic reactions, though rare, have also occurred. Of
potentially greater concern is the risk of redistributing sequestered
mercury throughout the body, especially to the brain, during chelation.
Once there, it is difficult if not impossible to remove. Sections
of the biomedical community claim that the chelating agent ALA,
being fat-soluble, can cross the blood-brain barrier to extract
mercury; but so far, this is not supported by the limited research
in this area13. Mercury redistribution to the brain during chelation
may also account in part for the regression some children experience
on biomedical treatments.14
The less serious side effects of chelation
involve bacterial or yeast disturbances (already discussed) and
the depletion of essential minerals, such as zinc, copper, manganese,
molybdenum, and magnesium. Chelation
removes the essential along with the harmful minerals, so careful
monitoring and supplementation are vital. Rashes; gastrointestinal
disturbances such as reflux, heartburn and diarrhoea; and an increase
in autistic and oppositional behaviours are also commonly reported
side-effects. The biomedical approach to these problems is not
to avoid creating them but to treat them - with additional supplements
and medications. Some on the biomedical forums are expressing
concern that the development of neurological disorders such as
multiple sclerosis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis later in
life by those who have had chelation may in fact be linked to redistribution of metals
or to other damage induced by that earlier chelation.
It is important to note that, at this point, long-term studies
on the safety of chelation have not
been done.
Problem 4: Nutritional Imbalances, Deficiencies,
and Intolerances
Good nutrition being the basis of good health,
removal from the diet of “non-foods” such as artificial additives,
flavourings, colourings, and preservatives, along with highly
processed foods of little nutritional value, constitutes removal
of an obstacle to cure [g]. This simple step of returning the
child to real foods often leads to substantial improvements, even
in the absence of any other intervention. But dietary restrictions,
though amongst the least harmful of all the biomedical approaches,
can produce their own nutritional deficiencies. They can also
create the very thing they are intended to relieve. When the consumption
of “safe” foods is increased to replace those to which the child
is intolerant, overexposure can create new sensitivities to the
replacement foods and result in further restrictions. At the same
time, total withdrawal of some foods can lead to new reactions
upon their reintroduction, as the body, having lost the need to
digest these foods, will have ceased production of the necessary
digestive enzymes. Some children become intolerant of so many
foods that parents resort to using hypoallergenic amino-acid-based
“milk” formulas such as Neocate either
as a supplementary food source or, in extreme cases, as a total
food replacement in order to forestall deficiency or starvation.
Biomedical treatments can also create nutritional
havoc. The leaching of vital minerals by chelation
has already been mentioned. Imbalances from megadoses
of supplements can distort the body’s biochemistry. Deficiencies
arising from dietary restrictions can also occur. For example,
excessive supplementation with zinc, either during chelation
or for low zinc levels, will inhibit copper absorption. Copper
deficiency then results in anæmia.15 This phenomenon has been
observed several times in biomedical children under my homœopathic
care.
Homœopathic Perspective on Biomedical Problems
At this point, it may be appropriate to make
a few comments from the homœopathic
perspective on these issues of yeast overgrowth or die-off; chelation
side-effects; and nutritional imbalances, deficiencies, or intolerances;
and on what has been observed in the author’s practice.
Dietary Modifications
Dietary changes, though the safest and simplest
to initiate of all the biomedical interventions, are not always
without problems. The removal of aggravating foods to help the
gut to heal can be a helpful short-term strategy, but it will
also remove symptoms important for making a prescription. From
time to time, it may be necessary for the child to return to a
normal diet so that the full symptom picture can re-emerge and
an appropriate prescription made. Some parents may be reluctant
to do this for fear of losing hard-won gains.
The improvement in symptoms following food removal
while under homœopathic treatment also
differs from the improvement following food removal while under
biomedical treatment, in that gut healing is much quicker and
the period of intolerance far shorter with homeopathic treatment.
I have seen many food sensitivities literally disappear overnight
in the face of a good homœopathic prescription.
In almost all other cases, such sensitivities have taken a little
longer to resolve but have been greatly reduced from early in
the course of treatment.
Supplementation
It is important for practitioner and parent
to realise that the nutritional supplementation of biomedicine
is a palliative approach that cannot replace all of the synergistic
benefits of real food. Nor can it fully correct the errors of
metabolism that create deficiency states in spite of plentiful
nutrition. It can create deficiencies, however, as already discussed
in relation to Zinc supplementation’s leading to anaemia. In contrast,
homœopathic treatment does not leach, block absorption, or
create imbalances but normalises the child’s nutrient absorption
and metabolism.
Yeast Overgrowth
Homœopathy rapidly and calmly manages yeast overgrowths (including Candida) if
the remedy is individualised to the sufferer’s symptoms rather
than given as a routine human symbiode.[h]
In my experience, this one thing, more than any other improvement,
strengthens parents’ trust and confidence in homœopathy.
It is as if parents see “yeast” as the great curse of biomedical
treatment - a difficult-to-manage and ever-present threat to the
health of their child. When homœopathy
rapidly deals with a troubling yeast overgrowth that has been
present for months to years in spite of biomedical treatment,
and manages this without any unpleasant die-off effects, parents
can be understandably elated. They often transfer the long-term
care of their child to homœopathy at
this point.
One thing to be aware of regarding aggravations,
similar or dissimilar, during the course of treatment is that
watchful parents may wrongly attribute them to either an overgrowth
of yeast or a die-off and lose confidence that homœopathy
alone can manage their child’s yeast issues. To avoid this, an
explanation about aggravations - their cause and significance
- is important in clarifying what is really happening at such
times.
Chelation
When parents are chelating their child, it usually
takes many months before an improvement is seen, and years for
completion. In contrast, I have repeatedly observed symptoms [i]
attributed to heavy-metal toxicity improve within hours of administration
of the homœopathic remedy. The removal
of heavy metals obviously cannot have occurred within this short
period, but it does appear as though the function of metabolic
pathways commonly affected by metals can be rapidly “normalised”
on exposure to the correct remedy. Interestingly, several of my
patients who have had homœopathic treatment
without any biomedical interventions show falling levels of heavy
metals in their hair-mineral analyses that correspond to the improvements
in behaviour and function that occurred whilst on treatment. It
is known that the body attempts to naturally remove heavy metal
burdens through elimination and excretion pathways. Any remedy
that moves that body toward a healthier state will facilitate
this process.
Finally, homœopathy
does not produce the damaging side-effects common in chelation,
either by “loosening” metals or as a direct result of the remedy
itself.
Homœopathy and Biomedicine Compared
The main differences between biomedical and
homœopathic treatment are summarised in the table on page
18. For those already familiar with homœopathy,
many points may be obvious or well known, but they do bear repeating.
1. Homœopathy is a
simple and unchanging system of medicine. Its therapeutic action
comes from the consistent application of a natural law, the law
of similars.[j]
Biomedicine is a conglomerate of complex
and changing treatments that vary from practitioner to practitioner,
and from year to year. It has no underpinning law to guide practice.
2. Homœopathy is safe.
It has no toxic side-effects and will not interact with other
prescribed substances. It does not harm.[k]
Biomedicine is capable of toxic side-effects,
leaching of vital minerals, and detrimental interactions with
other substances. It can and does harm.
3. Homœopathy is based
on the observation that an illness or disease can be removed by
the short-lived effects of a sufficiently similar second disease
of either natural or medicinal origin.[12] Once free of the short-lived
effects of the second disease, and no longer suffering from the
original disease, the body returns to a state of independent health
and homeostasis. Biochemical pathways are restored, and pathogens
die out uneventfully.
Biomedicine is based on an assumption that
the body’s biochemistry, or a pathogen affecting it, contains
the causes, rather than the intermediate effects, of ill-health.
It therefore uses chemicals to suppress or control symptoms, force
a particular response, or kill the pathogens. Side-effects, overgrowths,
and die-off symptoms are common.
4. Homœopathy treats
simply and methodically. A single medicine is prescribed according
to the presenting symptom complex and the law of similars.
Each dose is observed for the type of response it triggers in
the unwell person. An improvement followed by a partial return
of the original symptoms requires a further dose of the same remedy;
an improvement followed by the emergence of new symptoms requires
a dose of a newly matching remedy; and so on. In this way, the
practitioner moves the patient step by step toward perfect health.
(Part one, cases 1, 2, and 3, demonstrate this process.)
Biomedical treatment takes place in cumulative
and increasingly complex layers. Medicines are prescribed for
their suppressive or palliative effects in opposition to single
symptoms. The use of medicines to stimulate rather than suppress
the body’s own recuperative efforts is unknown in biomedicine.
5.Homœopathy does not create resistant pathogens
or increase food intolerances
Biomedical treatment of pathogens with antibiotics
and anti-fungals can lead to re-colonisation
by more resistant forms.16 Severe dietary restrictions may increase
rather than reduce food intolerances.
6.Compliance is easy with homœopathy.
There are no complicated dosage regimes or drastic diets. Homœopathic
medicines are pleasant tasting, and doses are small; they are
well-tolerated by children.
Compliance can be difficult with biomedicine.
Medicines may taste unpleasant or be difficult to swallow. Dietary
restrictions can turn meal times into battles, and complicated
treatment regimes disturb sleep and disrupt family life.
7.Homœopathic treatment is relatively inexpensive.
Consultation fees vary between practitioners, but once treatment
has been established, consultations are usually weeks to months
apart. Expensive and extensive investigations are not needed,
and medicinal costs are low.
Biomedical costs are expensive. Consultation
fees vary between practitioners; plans for extended treatment
requiring costly investigations and tests, followed by multiple
medicines and treatments, are the norm.
8.Homœopathy can frequently improve on biomedical
treatment.[l]
Biomedical treatment does not seem to add
to improvements produced by good homœopathic
prescriptions.[m]
9.When applied according to sound principles,
homœopathy has been shown to bring improvement for the great
majority of children, and often rapidly.[n]
Biomedical treatment is slow and demanding
on parents and children. Results are variable. Whilst some children
improve, a significant number, 50% or more, are not helped by
many of its approaches, and some regress during treatment.17
Implications of the biomedical approach for
homœopathic treatment
Implications of Biomedical Approach for Homeopathic
Treatment
The biomedical approach has significant implications
for the homœopathic treatment of the
A.S.D. child. They fall into three main areas:
1. Symptoms are Suppressed or Altered
Medicines and treatments are only ever given
to change, remove, or prevent symptoms; and in the process, the
homœopath may lose the very things he
or she needs for making an effective prescription. The degree
to which this happens with biomedicine varies from intervention
to intervention, but even seemingly benign changes such as dietary
modifications can cause this problem. An example of this can be
found in part one of this article, in Case 1, in which Alex’s
dietary changes had significantly modified his behaviours and
prevented any expression of food cravings, aversions, or aggravations.
Fortunately his mother could still recall what his symptoms were
like before the interventions began; many parents simply cannot
provide this information, either because too much time has elapsed
or because their child was too young to have tried a range of
different foods prior to the dietary restrictions. On these occasions,
it may be necessary to ask for all interventions to be suspended
for a period so that the child’s true symptoms can resurface.
In reality, most parents are reluctant to do this for fear that
any return of symptoms may permanently set back their child’s
improvement. This is especially so in early homœopathic
treatment, when the implications of palliation and suppression
may be difficult for the parent to grasp. Information and explanation
at this time will go a long way to easing any concerns. Sometimes
biomedically induced side-effects are
so pronounced and widespread that the practitioner can no longer
see the true symptom complex for prescribing purposes. If this
occurs, there is no option but to suspend treatment until the
troubling interventions have been completed and clearer symptoms
return. Parent and practitioner should be aware that the completion
of chelation may take years.
2. Artficial Symptoms
are Introduced
Not only can interventions remove symptoms from
the case; they can also introduce new ones by way of their own
side-effects. This can pose problems for the practitioner, who
must then decide whether the new symptoms are:
·
an aggravation produced by the remedy, in which case the remedy
should be immediately suspended. If the aggravation is similar
to the child’s existing symptoms, and these symptoms improve once
the aggravation settles, the remedy should be recommenced at a
reduced frequency, or in a smaller dose if the child is hypersensitive,
as soon as any improvement stalls or symptoms return. If the aggravation
is dissimilar to the symptoms, the wrong remedy has been chosen,
and it will not be followed by an improvement. In this event,
the symptoms should be re-examined and another prescription made
as soon as possible. Hahnemann advised to combine the pre-existing
symptoms with the symptoms of the aggravation in this instance
to prescribe a more appropriate remedy18;
·
side-effects of the biomedical treatment. Though suspected, they
can be difficult to confirm due to a lack of comprehensive data
on the side-effects of many biomedical supplements and treatments,
especially when used in combination. If the suspected side-effects
of a particular treatment cannot be confirmed by established sources
of information, the homœopath’s best
recourse is to enquire on the biomedical Internet forums whether
other parents have encountered a similar problem. If an association
between the biomedical treatment and the side-effect can be established,
the child’s parents should be advised as much, with a view to
modifying or suspending that treatment. Parents should also be
warned that side-effects of once-helpful biomedical treatments
- even vitamins or minerals - can occur as homœopathy moves their child to better state of health. This
aspect has already been commented on in Alex’s story (part one,
Case 1) and has been seen on numerous occasions in the author’s
practice. If biomedical side-effects are suspected, parents should
be asked to suspend the most likely intervention for a period.
If symptoms improve, the intervention can be omitted altogether
or reintroduced in a smaller measure. Unfortunately, many parents
will be reluctant to suspend interventions for fear of delaying
their child’s progress, especially if the biomedical treatments
have been trouble-free up to this point in time. Some may even
choose to stop homœopathic treatment
itself in the erroneous belief that it, rather than one of the
biomedical interventions, is the cause of their child’s symptoms.
If it later becomes obvious that this was not so, these parents
often return their child to homœopathic
treatment with renewed commitment;
·
nutritional deficiencies produced by a restrictive diet, or by
the leaching effects of chelation. If
either is suspected, the parents should be alerted and the necessary
tests and investigations conducted.
2. The Biomedical Family
The parents of a child with autism are frequently
under enormous social, financial, and treatment-related stresses,
all of which may affect their capacity to give homœopathic
treatment the same opportunity to help their child as they’ve
given the treatments in which they have invested much more time
and money. The search for elusive ingredients for organic home-cooked
meals and snacks; expensive treatments; three-hourly dosing schedules,
day and night; coping with the inevitable but often unjustified
guilt of not doing enough for their child; and juggling the needs
of other family members, just to mention some of the pressures,
will at times turn even the most well-adjusted parent into an
emotional and behavioural wreck. All of these dynamics feed into
homœopathic management and need to be
recognised and accommodated if the child is to be treated well.
Perhaps the biggest hurdle the homœopath
will have to overcome, though, is that of parents mistaking biomedicine
for the “serious stuff” and homœopathy
as an “add-on” treatment. In this regard, homœopathy
can be a victim of its own gentleness and simplicity. Parents
can easily attribute the gains made by it to the more obvious
rigours of concurrent biomedical treatments. Sometimes it is only
when scarce resources are directed away from homœopathic
treatment toward more biomedical interventions that it becomes
clear to parents which therapy has done what as improvements gained
over previous months slip away before their eyes. Parents will
then often return to homœopathy with
renewed commitment and confidence. Finally, in the world of autism,
the practitioner may have to accept that it is not just other
biomedical or orthodox practitioners whose treatments are complicating
the child’s symptom picture. Parents may be frequently initiating
their own interventions and treatments according to what is being
discussed and advised within parent self-help groups. In treating
the A.S.D. child, it is certainly true that we will rarely be
alone.
Making the Transition
Biomedical Dependency
In an ideal world, parents would suspend most,
if not all, biomedical interventions when commencing homœopathic
treatment. Case management would then be clearer and less complex
for both practitioner and patient. In reality, this rarely happens.
Initially, most parents remain highly dependent on biomedical
treatments until their confidence in homœopathy
has grown. Only then is it possible for them to consider discontinuing
some or all of its interventions. Reasons for this dependence
include the following.
Biomedicine’s Sophisticated and Impressive
Appearance
Biomedicine’s treatments are complex, expensive,
and embraced by highly educated doctors, pædiatricians,
specialists, and allied therapists. In contrast, homœopathy,
with its infrequent water doses or sugar pills prescribed by a
limited number of professional homœopaths,
appears too subtle or gentle in the eyes of some to achieve the
improvements promised by biomedicine. For this reason, parents
can easily attribute the gains from early homœopathic treatment to rigorous simultaneous biomedical
treatment.
Fear
Parents trying to “recover” their ASD-affected
children are frequently dealing with:
·
fear of missing the window period of early childhood in which
biomedicine has the potential to make the greatest difference
·
fear that valuable gains will be lost if their child regresses
because biomedicine was suspended in favour of an unknown homœopathy
·
fear of offending professionals who may currently be helping their
child
·
fear of being without the support, understanding, and friendship
of a biomedical community when much of society still struggles
to understand or accept their child’s confronting behaviours
·
fear that aggravations arising from homœopathic
treatment (or high doses of the supplements or medicines that
become unnecessary with successful treatment) may really be the
reactivation of gut dysbiosis or a sign of regression.
Misidentification of Homœopathy
Homœopathy is generally understood poorly and represented inaccurately by biomedical
proponents and on biomedical forums. It is often wrongly identified
as the use of nosodes*, isodes?,
human symbiodes[h], or complexes‡, used
in a “this for that” manner, or as a series of routine remedies
prescribed according to a causal history. Parents whose children
have been treated in this inadequate manner (by homœopathic
and non-homœopathic practitioners) have
a limited appreciation of homœopathy
and report variable results. As a consequence, seasoned members
of biomedical forums generally advise that, whilst “homœopathy”
is sometimes helpful, it is also unreliable; and that its practitioners
usually know too little of A.S.D. issues or biomedical treatments
for parents to entrust them with the complete care of their child.
Prior Investment
Biomedicine is a field in which the ground rules
are still being laid, and it is not unusual to find highly motivated
parents who are better informed about biomedical treatment options
and expected responses than many professionals. These parents
are often solely responsible for their child’s biomedical treatment,
and because of their experience in this area, may be sought out
by newer or less-knowledgeable parents for the information they
can share - something that is obviously flattering and gratifying.
In other instances, parents may confuse any success from their
child’s biomedical treatment with their own success as parents.
Either way, a lot more than time and money may be invested by
parents in their children’s biomedical treatment than is likely
with homœopathy.
Assisting in the Transition
Short of refusing to accept a child for treatment,
the best course of action for the homœopath
is to address the above issues with time, patience, education,
and a preparedness to support parents in the difficult transition
from an allopathic to a homœopathic
mode of treatment. If homœopathy’s potential
is to be fully realised by countless numbers of ASD-affected children,
then we as practitioners also have to present clear, accurate,
and consistent information on its principles and practice to the
biomedical community. Now, that’s a challenge worth picking up.
* Nosode: a potentised
preparation of diseased tissue or disease product.
† Isode: a potentised
preparation of diseased tissue or disease product from the patient
him- or herself.
‡Complex: a mixture of potentised
medicines.
Biomedicine or Homœopathy?
In summary, what can be said about biomedical
treatment? It’s my belief that, in the absence of homœopathy,
safe dietary modifications are the treatment of choice for A.S.D.-affected
children, and that the benefits of other biomedical approaches
should be judiciously weighed against their risks. As already
mentioned, depending on the symptoms involved and the treatment
employed, biomedicine has been shown to improve some symptoms
of some children who until recently have had very few treatment
options open to them. Its overall success rate is higher than
that of its cousin, orthodox medicine, and in comparison it is
generally safer. This information is displayed in a simple but
comprehensive treatment chart compiled by the Autism Research
Institute from the treatment reports from more than 26,000 parents19
that compares and contrasts the results of 53 orthodox medicines,
29 biomedical/”non-drug” medications, and ten special diets.
It is good practice for homœopaths
to remove “obstacles to cure”, allowing the body to heal itself,20
but some biomedical treatments that may initially seem to do this
can actually produce their own adverse effects in the process.
Chelation, for example, as already discussed,
may produce liver damage or gut dysbiosis. Anti-fungals such as
fluconazole (e.g. Diflucan) and
itraconazole (e.g. Sporanox) can
produce the previously mentioned Herxheimer
reaction or disorders such as deafness, hypertension, hepatotoxicity,
or anaphylaxis.21 22 Obviously, “removal” by these means is not
consistent with the homœopathic ideal
of rapid, gentle, and permanent cure.23 In addition, if improvements
occur through symptom palliation or suppression, then any short-term
relief will have to be weighed against future deterioration or
development of new symptoms.[p]
In comparison with homœopathy,
biomedicine is found wanting. It does not, for instance, produce
the rapidity of response or the consistency and breadth of improvement
that is possible with homœopathic treatment.[q]
It is associated with significant side-effects and compliance
issues, and its interventions are costly and disruptive. Finally,
many of its treatments have to be continued indefinitely if symptoms
are not to return. For these reasons alone, homœopathy deserves to be at the forefront of treatment options
for children with autism, not to be used merely as an ancillary
therapy; it is safe and effective and able to produce the long-term
results parents are looking for. All that is required for its
success is for practitioners to apply its core principles consistently
and clearly in the A.S.D. cases that come before them.
Other Interventions
Along with biomedicine, parents may frequently
be using a number of non-biomedical approaches in the treatment
of their child’s autism. I will not elaborate on these to the
degree I have on biomedical interventions, as, with the exception
of the orthodox pharmaceutical approach, they are generally nowhere
near as disruptive to homœopathic treatment.
These approaches include the following.
Orthodox Pharmaceutical Approach
Orthodox medicine relies on neuroleptic, antidepressant,
and stimulant medications to treat the symptoms of autism. This
approach has been shown to be least effective and the most dangerous
of all the medicinal and supplemental treatments, as the data
compiled by the Autism Research Institute reveal.24
Neuroleptic medications such as risperidone
(e.g. Risperdal) are used to manage
the behavioural symptoms associated with autism, such as aggression,
self-injury, obsessive-compulsive symptomatology,
hyperactivity, anxiety, agitation, aggression, rigidity and inflexibility,
and mood lability. Weight gain is one of their known short-term side-effects.
There is also the risk of tardive dyskinesia (involuntary tics and movements that continue even
upon cessation of the drug) from long-term usage.25 As illustrated
in part one with Ben (Case 3), homœopathy
is capable of successfully correcting the symptoms that these
allopathic medications suppress, with none of the risks or side-effects
associated with those medications.
Antidepressants may be used to reduce compulsions
and repetitive behaviours such as stims.
Their known side-effects of agitation and selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitor (SSRI)-induced behavioural activation26 and
a lack of adequate research on their effects on the autistic child
make their use precarious in the face of relatively minor improvements.
In contrast, homœopathy has a long history
of treating repetitive behaviours and obsessions without the risks
associated with these medicines.
The use of stimulant medication such as Ritalin
(methylphenidate) to treat autism-related hyperactivity has a
clear (if inexact) homœopathic relationship.
On the basis of “like treats like”, a medicine that would normally
overstimulate a healthy child has the
potential to calm a hyperactive one. The problems associated with
medicines such as Ritalin (methylphenidate) are that their constituent
chemicals produce side-effects, some of which are life-threatening,27
and that their results are variable, as the medication is not
matched to the unique symptoms of the sufferer. In contrast, homœopathy individualises on symptoms to exploit the entirety
of the law of similars and prescribes
non-toxic, chemical-free remedies.
Behavioural Therapies
Of these therapies, applied behavioural analysis
(A.B.A.) is the most frequently used intervention for autism,
and geographically the most widespread. It proposes that a “learning
blockage” makes it impossible for many children with autism to
learn from their environment in the way neurotypical children do. As a result, inappropriate behaviours
and responses develop. Behavioural therapists provide intensive
teaching in a structured environment, often in the form of exercises
and rewards, to overcome these learning blockages. The children
are drilled to modify their behaviour and to respond appropriately
to the different social cues or contexts of their surroundings.
Behavioural therapy is allopathic in approach,
as there is no disease relationship between therapy and symptoms.
In most instances, the child’s natural responses will be either
modified or suppressed through intensive drilling and reinforcement,
making it difficult for the homœopath to obtain a clear symptom picture. In these instances,
it is important to ask what the child was like before the therapy
commenced, especially if treatment has been in place for some
time.
One particularly striking type of behavioural therapy is the
use of an “aversive” such as mildly painful electric shocks. For
obvious reasons, aversive therapy has been embroiled in controversy.
Surprisingly, some parents report that for many children with
severe self-harming behaviours, the “aversive” has been a literal
lifesaver, reducing or eliminating practices such as self-mutilation,
violent head-banging, and self-biting when no other approach or
medication has helped. Self-injuring children reportedly appear
happier on the treatment and have on occasion requested it themselves
when no longer able to control their behaviour. Parents also report
that the intensity of the shock needed to stop their child from
engaging in what would be a severely painful self-injury is surprisingly
mild.28 This may all be true, but it’s also the case
that several remedies exist within the homœopathic materia medica
that have traditionally treated these self-injuring behaviours
in a more pleasant manner.
Neurosensory Approach
Sensory-processing disorders, often known as
sensory integration dysfunction (SID) or sensory processing disorder
(SPD), are common in autism. With SID, the child is unable to
appropriately process information from one or more of the five
special senses of vision, hearing, touch, olfaction, and taste;
the vestibular system that provides a sense of motion; or proprioception,
which brings a sense of position in space. The information received
through these senses is analysed abnormally by the brain, resulting
in confusion or distress. Techniques to correct or minimise SIDs
are frequently used by paediatric occupational therapists in Australia
and include sensorial integration, patterning, auditory training,
facilitated communication, and daily life therapy. The Irlen
approach; prism lenses designed to improve visual-processing difficulties;
and the reduction of sensitivity to different sound frequencies
by Auditory Integration Training (AIT) also fall into this category.
These techniques have no serious side-effects and in some instances
may act by removing maintaining causes or obstacles to cure. More
often, though, gains are achieved through compensation or palliation
while the underlying predisposition to these problems remains
uncorrected. Homœopathy is frequently successful at alleviating processing
problems; in my practice, distress from noise or odours, and poor
gross motor skills, are often amongst the first things to improve
following an appropriate remedy.
Psychodynamic Approach
This approach rests on the assumption that autism
is an anxiety-driven emotional imbalance that leads to social
withdrawal. Because autism develops early in life, the now discredited
“refrigerator mother” concept29 and inadequate maternal-infant
bonding have been postulated as triggers by this school of thinking.
Therapies include pheraplay and “holding
therapy”.30 Pheraplay is designed to
produce highly stimulating and intense interpersonal experiences
that are strong enough to overcome the child’s sensory impairments.
Holding therapy is more specific: the child is looked at in the
eyes and held closely to trigger distress until he or she finally
accepts comfort, or at least no longer resists. Obviously, these
approaches are traumatic and allopathic. There is no empirical
evidence to demonstrate their effectiveness. With autism now widely
regarded as a developmental rather than emotional disorder, the
psychodynamic approach, including psychotherapy and psychoanalysis,
is rarely used by therapists. Two exceptions to its allopathic
nature, however, can be seen in the “flooding” approach and some
aspects of the Son-Rise program31. Flooding, in a “like treats
like” manner, exposes the sufferer to intense and similar experiences
of the stimuli that cause the child’s unwanted emotional or behavioural
response.32 A fear of rubber bands, for instance, will be treated
by a series of exposures to large numbers of rubber bands, upon
which that fear lessens and then disappears. The Son-Rise program,
instead of suppressing or replacing the child’s stims,
teaches parents to enter the child’s world by mimicking their
child’s repetitive behaviours. In doing so, parents report that
their child begins to interact more appropriately with his or
her environment. Their stims, rather
than escalating, often reduce in incidence. Nijhof33 posits that
these repetitive behaviours may be the body’s attempt to achieve
homeostasis; their suppression does not, contrary to popular belief,
result in desirable behaviours and may in fact be counterproductive.
Miscellaneous
A mix of other therapies and approaches that
cannot be easily be placed elsewhere fall into this category.
They include, but are not limited to, cranio-sacral,
chiropractic, and osteopathic approaches; weighted items; hyperbaric
chamber treatment; kinesiology; and animal and music therapies.
To show the extent of services and treatments that are gathering
in A.S.D. treatment, Research Autism provides a descriptive list,
which is by no means exhaustive, of more than 70 therapies and
interventions.34 Of interest and concern is that homœopathy
is not included.
a. Suppression: the suppression (Hahnemann’s
term, Unterdrückung: under pressing) of symptoms refers to the
concealment of perceptible manifestations of a disease condition
without the cure of the disease (Hahnemann CS. Organon of the
Medical Art [6th ed] [trans. O'Reilly]. Redmond, Washington: Birdcage,
1996 [1842], p. 354). Homoeopaths hold that continual suppression
of symptoms leads to worsening health.
b. Allopathy: The treatment of disease with
substances that produce effects different to the symptoms of that
disease. Often used as a term for orthodox medicine. (In contrast,
homoeopathy treats disease with substances that produce effects
similar to those of the disease).
c. Palliation: To palliate is to cause to appear
less grave [L. palliatus covered with a cloak]. Macquarie Dictionary.
d. In contrast, homeopathy’s development into
a fully holistic method of treatment was a response to the observation
that full health is restored only when symptom totality, including
those symptoms unrelated to the autism, has been fully removed.
e. “Stims” and “stimming” are colloquialisms
for self stimulation. A stim is a repetitive behaviour that either
stimulates, calms, or aids concentration.
f. Common sources of exposure to mercury are:
environmental, such as with broken fluorescent tubes or mercury
thermometers; maternal, leaching from dental amalgams into the
bloodstream and then crossing the placental barrier or entering
breastmilk; and vaccinial, such as RhoGAM or the increasingly
numerous childhood vaccines that contain mercury, listed as either
thiomersal or thimerosal (limited in quantity by legislative action
in 1999).
g. Obstacle to cure: an occasioning or maintaining
cause (introducing or maintaining a condition) or impediment to
an otherwise curative medicine. See Hahnemann CS. Organon of the
Medical Art [6th ed] [trans. O'Reilly]. Redmond, Washington: Birdcage,
1996 (1842), §§ 7, 260.
h. Symbiode: A potentised preparation of a microorganism
symbiotic with an animal, e.g., in humans, Candida albicans. Prescription
of a symbiode that does not correspond to the sufferer’s individualising
symptoms will generally be of little to no benefit.
i. Eye contact; reduced sensitivity to external
stimuli; improvement in behaviour; increase in expressive language;
acceptance of touch; and desire for interaction are all improvements
that have been noted in some children within hours after being
prescribed a single dose of a similar remedy. In others, these
improvements have occurred in one to three days (still with one
dose of the remedy).
j. The law of similars is a natural law that
underpins homoeopathic action: the “like cures like” phenomenon.
Homoeopaths observe that the correct remedy for a patient’s disease
is that substance that will produce, in a healthy person, symptoms
similar to those of the disease.
k. In order to address health problems without
producing toxic chemical effects, homoeopathy most commonly uses
submolecular preparations of medicines. The process by which these
medicines are prepared involves their serial dilution and succussion
(vigorous shaking), a process called potentisation.
l. For example, cure of deafness, dyspnoea,
and chronic ophthalmia can occur through smallpox, which causes
all three; the pain and inflammation of a burn can be relieved
by stinging nettle.
m. Alex’s story (Case 1, part one) is one such
example from many in my fi les. In other cases, parents repeatedly
report substantial and rapid improvements in their child’s progress
following the prescription of an appropriate homoeopathic remedy
even though that child may already have been on biomedical treatment
for a long time.
n. Of the children I have treated during the
last two years (more than 100), there has not been a single case
in which biomedical treatment has further improved the progress
of a child already doing well on homoeopathic treatment. In contrast,
I have several cases in which children regressed substantially
when homoeopathic treatment was suspended in favour of biomedical
treatment, only to rapidly improve again upon return to homoeopathic
treatment. A large percentage of my remaining cases have been
treated both biomedically (not by me) and homoeopathically as
parents unfamiliar or underconfi dent with the homoeopathic approach
have chosen to combine both methods of treatment in an effort
to help their children. These children progress no more rapidly
than those children who are receiving homoeopathic treatment only.
Frequently, their progress has been slowed as biomedical treatments
complicated or hindered homeopathic management.
o. A review of the more than 100 A.S.D. cases
in my clinic shows improvement in 98%. Their speed of improvement
has varied from slow but consistent to startling. The three cases
discussed in part one of this article provide a guide to what
can be expected in general practice. The more I practise homoeopathy,
the more I am convinced that the law does not fail the practitioner:
the practitioner fails the law.
p. On at least one biomedical discussion list
with an emphasis on chelation, it is frequently stated that initial
improvements of many months’ duration can be followed by a regression
back into autism with symptoms worse than when treatment began.
When this happens, parents are told that little can then be done
to help their child.
q. This is repeatedly evidenced in the author’s
own clinic when the results of homoeopathic treatment are compared
with the results clients report of previous biomedical treatment,
or compared with results reported by parents on biomedical Internet
forums.
To be continued
Part three will discuss:
·
How to take the case of an A.S.D. child
·
The significance of miasms in A.S.D.s
·
“Homœopathic” approaches such as bowel
nosodes and sequential therapy: do they have a role to play?
·
The uncertainties inherent in combination homœopathics,
used by non-homœopaths as part of their
therapy and the treatment of autism
·
Adults with autism: can homœopathy help
or has irreversible damage been done?
·
Correction of vaccine injury: is it possible, and what can homœopathy do?
Attention: Homeopathy for Autism is looking
for homeopaths around the world who treat according to the principles
outlined in this article. If that sounds like you, please visit
http://www.homeopathy4autism.com
to submit your location and contact details as parents are currently
looking for someone just like you.
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