Thursday, May 19, 2011

Alternative autism treatments can be appealing to desperate ...

BALTIMORE -- After her daughter Jodie was diagnosed with autism, Alison Singer went online, searching desperately for anything that looked like it might help her little girl.

She tried gluten-free and casein-free diets and supplements. She sprinkled something called DMG on her daughter?s French toast. She even heard from a doctor who suggested buying a giant electromagnet that could reorganize ions in the brain.

?Parents are very vulnerable when their children are diagnosed. They want to do anything and everything to help their children, and they fall prey to these charlatans peddling the ?cure du jour,?? said Singer, who lives in Scarsdale, N.Y.

Singer?s experience illustrates the frustration that often drives parents of autistic children to alternative treatments -- including a controversial regimen by a Maryland doctor whose license was suspended recently by the Maryland Board of Physicians. That doctor, Mark Geier, injects some patients with Lupron, a drug approved for use in treating prostate cancer in men and endometriosis in women.

Geier sought Wednesday to have his license reinstated, but the board declined after a hearing that was closed to the public. His lawyer, Joseph A. Schwartz III, framed the situation as a ?difference of opinion,? with ?just as many doctors on our side.? Schwartz also said the parents of Geier?s patients have signed affidavits calling the charges ?a bunch of baloney.?

?All we can say now is this stuff works. You can call it a crazy therapy, but it works,? Schwartz said about Lupron.

Families participating in a database at the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore -- the largest autism database in the world -- report using 381 different treatments. On average, families use five treatments simultaneously and spend $500 a month on them. A few use dozens, and the record is 56.

The problem, autism experts say, is that mainstream medicine has been very slow to identify the causes of autism and to identify effective medical or behavioral therapies. Among those now regarded as supported by randomized, controlled scientific studies are the Applied Behavior Analysis and Early Achievements Program used at Kennedy Krieger; certain speech, language and occupational therapies, and melatonin therapy.

?There is sort of an old adage in medicine that says: ?When there are no good treatments for a disorder, or a disease, there?s a proliferation of treatments,?? said Dr. Paul Law, director of Kennedy Krieger?s Interactive Autism Network and the father of an 18-year-old with autism. The database has more than 38,000 participants from all 50 states.

Law said it?s ?impractical and probably wrong to tell families not to do anything that?s not evidence-based. But it is important to encourage families to have a rational approach to the things they try ... so you don?t wind up on 20-some interventions.?

Geier used injections of Lupron, which suppresses testosterone production, at a network of clinics in Maryland and several other states. Geier and his son, David, claim that testosterone is elevated in autistic children and worsens the vaccine-related mercury toxicity they blame for autism.

In suspending Mark Geier?s medical license two weeks ago, the Board of Physicians issued a report alleging that he put children at risk.

The board said he improperly diagnosed patients, failed to fully inform parents of the treatment dangers and misrepresented his credentials -- all charges he denied.

On Wednesday, after the board hearing, Geier and his attorney said they will appeal the suspension.

Source: http://www.sunherald.com/2011/05/18/3123494/alternative-autism-treatments.html

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