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Elevated
blood mercury levels found in vaccinated
infants
Preterm
infants who receive hepatitis B vaccine
are showing elevated blood mercury levels
according to an article in the May 2000
issue of The Journal of Pediatrics. The
vaccines contain thimerosal an organic mercury
compound used in several drugs and vaccines.
"Preterm
infants receive the same dose of hepatitis
B vaccine as do term infants usually within
the first days of life" said Gregory
V. Stajich Pharm.D. associate professor
of pharmacy practice at Mercer University
Southern. "Because dosing adjustments
are not made based on birth weight preterm
infants are exposed to relatively more mercury
than term infants."
Their
study which measured mercury levels in 15
preterm and five full term infants determined
that preterm infants had more than three
times the mean mercury levels than did term
infants after an initial dose of hepatitis
B vaccine.
"Because
little is known about mercury's effects
on the neonate this early exposure to mercury
should raise concern" Stajich said
"especially in preterm infants who
are already at greater risk of neurological
disorders."
Studies
have shown that humans are subject to health
risks from mercury in fish and in the environment.
However this new study provided the first
clinical evidence that neonates develop
measurable levels of mercury in their blood
following hepatitis B vaccination.
"It
appears from other studies that mercury
in high levels during critical developmental
periods may be neurotoxic" the authors
state. "Because we found a statistically
significant rise in total mercury levels
in these infants after vaccination we are
concerned about the possibility of compounding
the neurologic risk for these infants."
SOURCE:
"Researchers find elevated blood mercury
levels in preterm infants receiving hepatitis
B vaccine" Mercer University School
of Medicine May 13 2000.
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