-Caveat Lector-

From
http://www.insightmag.com/archive/200010316.shtml

}}>Begin
0/30/2000
the last word
By Paul M. Rodriguez, Managing Editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Squalene Presence Confirmed by FDA
Since July 1997 Insight has been reporting on the presence of antibodies to a
substance called squalene that has shown up in the blood of sick U.S. soldiers
of the Persian Gulf War era � both those who served overseas during the
conflict and those who were called to service but never deployed. The theme
that has run throughout these reports, contrary to many erroneous statements by
Department of Defense (DOD) officials, has been a simple one: How and why does
something that shouldn�t be there show up in the blood of these sick people?
       The DOD has spent a considerable amount of time � and taxpayer dollars �
trying to spin Insight�s stories and the scientists involved in the squalene
discovery. The DOD repeatedly has claimed that, because it never used squalene
in any of the vaccines given to gulf-war-era personnel, there is no reason for
it to pursue what it has called a kooky, wacky and flawed test.
       The problem for DOD � and, therefore, an allied problem for the General 
Accounting Office (GAO) and a growing number of members of Congress on both sides of 
the aisle � is that the allegedly kooky testing procedure
 was developed at the prestigious School of Medicine at Tulane University by one of 
it�s leading immunologists, Dr. Robert Garry. Moreover, Tulane has been so impressed 
with Garry�s work in discovering a test to find anti
bodies to squalene that it helped to get the technique patented. But DOD bizarrely 
said that patenting the test undermines Tulane�s integrity.
       So what is squalene? And what�s it got to do with sicknesses reported by tens 
of thousands of U.S. military and civilian personnel? Squalene is a naturally 
occurring substance found in a wide range of products and
even in trace amounts in humans. It�s also considered in experimental science to be a 
promising new adjuvant to help speed the absorption and potency of various vaccines 
under development. Notice we�ve said experimental m
edicine. That�s because the only government-approved adjuvant for use in humans is 
alum. It has been used as an adjuvant for nearly 50 years and is considered safe by 
the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
       Over the years many scientists have been looking for a new and more efficient 
adjuvant, and experiments often have focused on squalene as a promising replacement 
for alum. However, because any adjuvant may trigger
unwanted autoimmune dysfunctions in humans, testing of squalene adjuvants has taken a 
long time and only in the last decade has it been licensed for use in cutting-edge 
medical experiments using investigational new drugs
(INDs).
       Meanwhile, one of the leading experimenters with squalene has been DOD. When 
Insight first began its now 3-year-old series of stories, DOD denied ever having used 
squalene in any form. Period. Then it acknowledged
experimenting with it in labs. Then on animals. Finally, DOD admitted it even had 
begun limited IND tests using squalene adjuvant in human trials involving 
immunizations to combat HIV and malaria. But never, ever, accordi
ng to DOD, was it used on U.S. troops or personnel prior to or after the gulf war.
       Then how to explain antibodies to the substance showing up in sick soldiers and 
civilians whose common denominator has been that they received a full complement of 
shots (or nearly all of them) just before, or shor
tly after, the gulf war began?
       Besides its denials, DOD also has argued variously that the Tulane research was 
faulty, that it wasn�t peer-reviewed and therefore was shoddy. Then, when the Tulane 
study was peer-reviewed in Experimental and Molec
ular Pathology, it went after the credibility of Garry and the university, smearing 
the character and reputation of both, as well as the renowned journal.
       This has been curious to us, as it has been curious to the GAO and the growing 
list of bipartisan members of Congress, including Republican Rep. Jack Metcalf of 
Washington state. If Tulane�s test was so bad, why no
t simply replicate it, or take Tulane�s own �kits� and expose the Garry research as 
false? But DOD wouldn�t do that. It said this would be a waste of money and, besides, 
it never used squalene in any medicine or vaccine a
dministered to troops during the gulf war and the FDA has confirmed this.
       Here�s the rub: FDA says it has done no such thing. It confirms that it has 
approved a variety of vaccines used by the military, but says that until recently it 
never tested on its own to determine whether squalene
 ever was mixed with such medicines. With prodding from GAO and Metcalf, FDA
ultimately did its own tests � and found trace amounts of squalene. This raised
questions about tests DOD has widely claimed proved nothing was there �
especially since it appears that DOD�s labs used an improper testing method.
The FDA used the proper test, the one recommended by the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
       What�s troubling about the trace amounts of squalene FDA has discovered
is that they were found in the samples of anthrax-vaccine lots administered
during the gulf war. And though minuscule (parts per billion), an expert at
Baylor University contacted by Metcalf is concerned it might � might � be a
factor in so much sickness reported by so many personnel of the gulf-war era.
Why? Because even at such small levels it could affect a human autoimmune
system and lead to unexplained illnesses similar to those reported by gulf-war
era personnel.
       Maybe squalene was added to the vaccines and DOD is lying. Maybe it
wasn�t added. Either way, maybe Tulane has found an indicator to identify these
sick people. But until DOD stops playing war games we�ll never know the answer
to this question: Why does something show up in sick gulf-war-era personnel �
those who served in theater and those who never left the United States?


End<{{
A<>E<>R

Integrity has no need of rules. -Albert Camus (1913-1960)
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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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