Hannah Poling
Hannah Poling is a girl with mitochondrial enzyme deficit
Needles are scary Anti-vaccination movement |
Pricks against pricks |
v - t - e |
The case was concluded without cause.
What makes the case seem like a smoking gun for vaccines causing autism is that Hannah had a series of ear infections, delaying vaccinations until receiving 5 in one day at 19 months of age. She experienced side effects such as irritability, rash, and a bad fever.[2] Two months later, she became very sick, and would pull at her left ear. Five months later, she had a speech delay, and at one point in time she appeared to dislike eye contact. While speech delay and avoidance of eye contact are hardly exclusive to autism, anti-vaxxers were quick to play armchair psychiatry and blame the vaccines as the perfect fit for their "theories".
A prominent autism blogger noted that descriptions of Hannah didn't show enough evidence to meet the diagnostic criteria of autism.[3] The only autistic-like traits she showed were differences in social relatedness, avoidance of eye contact, and an interest at staring at fluorescent lights (possibly a sign of sensory processing disorder, a condition that is common in but not limited to autistic people).
Hannah was quickly found to have a mitochondrial enzyme deficit that caused encephalopathy.[4] Mitochondrial disorders are starting to be frequently found in autistic people as the ability to diagnose it becomes more accurate and less costly.[5] It is a very rare disorder group where research is still limited, but the disorder often causes autism symptoms between 1 & 2 years of age. Cases have pointed to infections worsening encephalopathy with this disorder.[6] While not admitting cause, there isn't anything disproving that vaccines can make encephalopathy worse. Likely resulting the case being found for the family.
It was trumpeted as a smoking gun by the anti-vaccine crowd. However, as Steven Novella has repeatedly stated, this case "...involves a rare, underlying mitochondrial disorder that is not relevant to other vaccine cases." Not that the vaccine denier crowd gives a shit about facts or reality as Jenny McCarthy is still a renowned spokesperson for mothers affected by vaccines and autism... even though her child probably has Landau-Kleffner syndrome
References
- The New England Journal of Medicine - Correspondence Vaccines and Autism Revisited
- The Hannah Poling case and the rebranding of autism by antivaccinationists as a mitochondrial disorder - Science-Based Medicine
- Vaccines, Autism and the Concession
- United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation - Disorder Types
- Oliveira G, Ataide A, Marques C, et al. Epidemiology of autism spectrum disorder in Portugal: prevalence, clinical characterization, and medical conditions. Dev Med Child Neurol 2007;49:726-733
- Vaccines and Autism Revisited — The Hannah Poling Case
- It's a common misdiagnosis, but it's been almost 5 years now... maybe she should realize the mistake.