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21st March 06:04
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Scientific evidence proves that: Silicone breast implants can produce autoimmune illnesses (autoimmune dry eye dermatomyositis kidney allergies)
I know this is an old one, but some have never seeen it and it is
ALWAYS good when we get to read one that gives a little promise of
HOPE........
Scientific evidence proves that:
Silicone breast implants can produce autoimmune illnesses.
Once the implants are removed, you still need to detoxify the body of
silicone residuesñhereís how.
Since their introduction in 1962, silicone breast implants have been
surgically emplaced in an estimated two million American women. Some
women get them as part of breast reconstruction therapy following
mastectomy for breast cancer, but the majority get them because they
want larger breasts.
Now, 36 years later, it is alarmingly apparent that bigger,
siliconized breasts can be hazardous to your health. Weíre beginning
to see that the real cost of cosmetic breast enhancement may not be
the $6,000 in surgical fees to implant them, but a host of autoimmune
symptoms and strange illnesses that can crop up, typically within
about seven years of implantation.
450,000 Siliconized Women Sue
Not everyone sees it this way of course. The subject of silicone
breast implants is clouded and controversial, marked by denial,
cover-up, stonewalling, suppressed research, bankruptcy, and class
action lawsuits. There is also much suffering involved.
The manufacturers and most plastic surgeons strenuously insist
silicone breast implants pose no health danger; most women apparently
believe this because 87,704 more American women received implants in
1996. Between 1992 and 1997, the number of breast augmentation
surgeries increased by 275%, according to the American Society of
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons.
The majority were saline implants in a silicone casing; the only women
still getting silicone implants are those who opt for breast
reconstruction following mastectomy and agree to be part of the FDAís
clinical trials on silicone implants.
Yet thousands of women who have had their implants for one or two
decades now are seeking medical help for mysterious symptoms which
resemble arthritis, fibromyalgia, scleroderma, connective tissue
disorders, and/or immune dysfunction and seem to be associated with
their implants.
In 1992, the FDA declared a moratorium on sales of silicone breast
implants, citing the lack of clinical studies proving their safety.
However, the FDA did not say silicone implants were unsafe, hedging,
as usual, on the side of manufacturers and against the public, calling
lamely for more studies.
Yet as early as 1954 an in-house study by Dow Corning, a prime implant
manufacturer, found that the silica in silicone has quite a high order
of toxicity,according to recently released do***entation of that
previously suppressed study. In 1956, silicone fluid injected into
laboratory dogs migrated to all the major organs; and in 1961, the
year the first implants were released, Dowís own internal medical
research department reported that silicone leaking from implants is
equivalent in toxic effect to direct injections of silicone into the
body.
Prior to implants, that had been the preferred method of breast
enhancement. But in the 1940s, Japan, for one, banned this procedure
for its immunologically toxic effects, which included poisoning,
infections, and the early development of cancer. Even so, it remained
legal in the U.S. until the 1960s.
In 1984, setting a precedent for all women with implants and
silicone-associated illnesses, a woman named Maria Stern won $1.5
million in damages for autoimmune symptoms produced by her implants.
Litigation momentum has been building ever since.
By 1995, an estimated 450,000 American women had qualified to be part
of a gigantic $4.25 billion class action suit against the silicone
implant manufacturers. Many of the injured women fell through the
litigation cracks in 1995 when Dow Corning, one of the principal
defendants, declared bankruptcy, thereby taking itself conveniently
off the fiscal hook. But now that Dow Corning has agreed to a smaller
global settlement ($3.2 billion allocated, announced in July 1998),
perhaps some injured women will finally receive at least some
recompense.
As medical authorities and scientific expertscontinually downplay the
risks of implants and assert that no association between implants and
symptoms has been proven, the case for silicone implant toxicity is
growing, fueled in large measure by the fact-finding efforts of the
Plaintiffís Steering Committee (PSC) for the National Breast Implant
Litigation, consolidated in Birmingham, Alabama. This national
committee, appointed by U.S. District Court Judge Sam Pointer, is
comprised of 17 attorneys from around the country.
The nationally consolidated cases are known as the Silicone Gel Breast
Implant Product Liability, Multi-District Litigation Action No.
926.Part of the Committeeís job, according to Karen E. Read, chief
staff attorney for the PSC Office of Liaison Counsel, is to gather and
organize evidence suitable for use in any and all court actions
against the silicone implant makers. In legal terms, itís called
discovery.î
We are nearly finished with the discovery process now and a slew of
cases, sitting dormant for years, are about to go back to the courts
for litigation,says Read. Litigants can potentially use any or all of
the evidence we developed nationally in their jurisdictional
trials.That is, if they havenít been intimidated by the manufacturerís
lawyers and dropped out, Read adds. Siliconized women are under a lot
of pressure not to press their claims.
First, the strongest cases, the ones most potentially damaging to the
silicone makersñsuch as clearly proven deaths or cancerñoften get
settled out of court to avoid adverse publicity, Read explains.
Second, women, in the process of giving their depositions, are
sometimes subjected to ruthless grilling and character assassinationby
the defense lawyers, in a manner similar to the way **** victims are
blamed for attracting the crime, Read claims. Theyíre asked about
secret, private, embarassing things, such as their ***ual history.
Women end up settling for almost nothing just to have it be over.î
Third, about 50,000 women have already opted to pursue their own case
independently in court rather than accept the minimal sums now being
offeredñin some cases, a mere 5% of the original proposed settlement,
says Read.
Whatever the outcome of the individual court cases and the class
action lawsuit, the evidence for the toxicity of silicone implants is
increasing daily, despite the firewall of denial and derision erected
by mainstream medicine and the FDA. Here is a précis of the facts, as
gathered from scientific studies:
1. Silicone is a biologically active and toxic substance.
The original statement by the Dow Chemical Company in the 1940s,
repeated hundreds of times since, that silicone is biologically inert
and nontoxic, was based on a single one-week study of rats and guineas
pigs. (In 1943, Dow Chemical Company and Corning Glassworks formed Dow
Corning Corporation to market silicone and silicone implants.)
The basic gel implant fillerñDC 360 silicone fluidñwas once considered
worth following upfor development by Dow Corning scientists as a
potent insecticide, one of the few known substances capable of killing
****roaches.
Dow Corning researchers also studied silicone as a possible better
chemical warfare and riot control agent,according to a
1969 internal memorandum obtained by the PSC.
The silicone gel is not a single substance but a fluid comprised of
numerous different versions of silicone, such that it is better termed
a chemical soup.î
Research collected by the PSC shows that silicone has marked effects
on the adrenal glands and liver, induces chronic inflammation, and
degrades into smaller molecules, including silica.
Silicone fed to rabbits produced widespread toxic effects including
kidney and spleen damage within four months.
(Stanford Medical Bulletin, 10:1 [1952], 23-26.)
That silicone is toxic in both animals and man is well proven,stated
John S. Sergent, M.D., and colleagues in Textbook of Rheumatology
(W.B. Saunders Company, 1993).
Silicone degrades into silica, usually at the surface of the gel
implant, then fragments and subdivides into millions of microdroplets
capable of migrating throughout the body (PSC Records No. 1352, 7017:
these are do***ents produced by Dow Corning in national litigation).
Silica in the body is a toxic, carcinogenic substance, damaging the
immune system, killing cells, and producing silicosis.
Silicone and its contaminants which bleed through its surrounding
implant envelope into neighboring tissue have the potential for
significant toxicity in the implant recipient.(Seminars in Arthritis
and Rheumatology 24:1 Suppl 1 [August
1994], 11-17.)
According to research gathered by attorney Richard Alexander, of the
Alexander Law Firm in San Jose, California, Dow Chemical and Dow
Corning have been aware of the toxic effects of silicone and silica
since the 1950s, based on their own studies, but never published the
data. They knew these substances were bioreactive, immunogenic, toxic,
and inflammatory when introduced into the human body,states Alexander.
(Update on Breast Implants,January 1998, website:
http://consumerlawpage.com.)
Researchers at the University of California at Los Angeles School of
Medicine concluded in 1995: From a pathophysiological perspective,
silicones should be expected to be bioactive materials and the
physico-chemical and immunological data at the experimental level are
compelling.(Journal of Biomaterials Science, Polymer Edition 7:2
[1995],
101-13.
2. Implants will likely rupture and leak within ten years of
placement.
In 1995, then FDA Commissioner David A. Kessler, M.D., stated that the
rupture rate of silicone implants ranges between 5% and 51% and that
unfortunately we do not know with any confidence where within that
range the real rupture rate lies.î
When 51 implants were removed, one to 17 years after implantation, 27
were found to have ruptured, 7 were leaking, and only 17 were in good
condition; all implants older than ten years were leaking or ruptured.
(Plastic Reconstructive Surgery 91:5 [April 1993], 828-834.)
Based on an examination of 350 silicone implants, doctors found that
63% of those implants in place for 12 years or more were not intact.
(Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery 99:6 [1997], 1597-1601.)
According to Lu-Jean Feng, M.D., of Mt. Sinai Medical Center in
Cleveland, Ohio, in evidence presented to the PSC,
11% of implants which have been in the body less than seven years
rupture, but of those in the body more than seven years, 61% rupture.
Deformities such as holes or cracks were found in 40% of 1,717 breast
implants after six years of use and in 95% after
12 years of use. (Canadian Journal of Plastic Surgeons [Spring 1997].)
When breast implants from 300 patients were examined, 71% had either
rupture or silicone bleed, or both, and 63% of
592 implants, when removed, were found to have ruptures. This led
researchers to conclude: We have found and predict that most implants
have lost or will lose the integrity of the silicone shell between
eight and 14 years, leaving free silicone [in and out of the capsule]
in the breast.(Annals of Plastic Surgery 34:1 [January 1995], 1-6.)
Based on an examination of 217 silicone implants removed during a
four-year period, physicians concluded that, either from leakage or
rupture, 40% failed within six years of implantation, and 95% within
12 years. (Canadian Journal of Plastic Surgery 4:1 [1996], 55-58.)
Using magnetic resonance spectroscopy, researchers found that among 39
women with implants, 20 (51%) had ruptured implants and 27 (69%) had
evidence of silicone in their livers. (Radiology 201:3 [December
1996], 777-783.)
Complications of implants requiring further surgery are likely within
five years, based on a study of 749 women with silicone implants.
During a median span of 7.8 years after implantation, 27% of the women
underwent 450 implant-related surgeries; 79% of these surgeries were
needed to address a complication, most frequently among which were
capsular contraction (tightening of scar tissue around the implant)
and rupture. (New England Journal of Medicine 336:10 [March
6, 1997], 677-682.)
French researchers found that the well-described leakage occurring
through the silicone envelope allows the silicone gel to diffuse to
multiple anatomic areas in the body,producing a cellular response that
includes the formation of a capsule around the implant. (Revue de
Medecine Interne 18:12 [1997], 955-966.)
3. Silicone migrates from the rupture site throughout the body.
As early as 1956, Dow Chemical researchers knew that liquid silicone,
when injected into the body, migrates to all the major organs,
including the spleen, heart, lung, and brain. (PSC Record No. 0006.)
Studies by both Dow Corning and Dow Chemical in 1970 confirmed that
silicone, after injection, migrates to the bone marrow of animals and
changes brain weight. They also showed that silicone particles migrate
from a human finger joint into the lymph nodes. (PSC Record No. 0018,
7038.)
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine in Texas found that silicone
is widely distributed throughout the body of mice after a single
injection, migrating to ten different organs from the brain to the
uterus and persisting in these organs over time. (American Journal of
Pathology 152:3 [March 1998], 645-649.)
Researchers at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee found
that following silicone implant rupture, silicone gel migrated into
the arm of a woman, where it produced nerve pain, dysfunction, and
fibrosis. (Plastic Reconstructive Surgery 89:5 [May 1992], 949-952.)
Physicians at Massachusetts General Hospital in Charlestown, using
magnetic resonance imaging, found that a significant amount of free
siliconehad migrated from an implant (not noticeably ruptured) into
the liver and spleen of a woman.
(Magnetic Resonance Medicine 36:3 [September 1996], 498-501.
Researchers also found that silicone in the liver could be detected in
the first three to four years after a woman received her implant.
(Magnetic Resonance Medicine
33:1[January 1995], 8-17.)
Of 39 women with silicone implants, 27 (69%) showed signs of silicone
in their livers, and of the 20 whose implants had ruptured, silicone
was detected in the livers of 17 (85%). In other words, whether the
implants rupture or not, silicone leaks and migrates to the liver.
(Radiology 201 [1996], 777-783; PSC Record No. 0050.)
In 1989, studies by Dow Corning showed that silicone, given orally to
rats, increased liver size and weight by up to 45% and suggested the
enlargement might be interpreted as a carcinogenic response. (PSC
Record No. 0482.)
4. Silicone produces abnormalities in immune system functioning.
Silicone elicits antibody responses and immunological
abnormalities,according to a study of 40 women who had received
implants more than ten years earlier. Among these women, 60% had an
elevated ratio of helper T cells to suppressor T cells; 20% had a
blockage in particular functions of T cells and natural killer cells.
(Toxicology Industrial Health 8:6 [November/December 1992], 415-429.)
Scientists at the University of California at Davis reported that
evidence suggests that the degradation products of silicone inactivate
CD8+ suppressor T cells (key immune cells) and thereby lead to an
inflammatory state in the body. (Food and Chemical Toxicology 32:11
[November 1994], 1089-1100.)
The activity of natural killer cells is significantly suppressedin at
least 50% of women with silicone implants observed in a study; this
puts the women at a higher risk of developing cancer. The same effect
was demonstrated in animals; it was reversed upon removal of the
silicone. (Toxicology and Industrial Health 10:3 [May/June 1994],
149-154.)
High levels of anti-nuclear antibodies (ANAs), immune markers
associated with lupus erythematosus, were observed in ten of 11 women
with implants reporting autoimmune symptoms. (Lancet 340:8831
[November 28, 1992], 1304-1307.)
When 500 women with silicone implants were examined, 30% tested
positive for ANA levels; those women also had rheumatic symptoms. The
results strongly suggested immune activation in women with silicone
implants.(Current Topics in Microbiological Immunology 210 [1996],
277-282.)
Based on a study of 3,380 breast implant recipients, scientists state
there is a sixfold increased likelihood that testing these women will
show elevated ANAs; the longer the implant has been in place, the
greater the likelihood. (Current Topics in Microbiological Immunology
210 [1996], 337-353.)
In a study of 111 women (with and without implants), those with
implants had a statistically significant elevationof anti-silicone
antibodies (immune cells focused against silicone as a foreign
substance in the body); the highest levels were observed in women with
noticeable implant rupture or leakage. (FASEB 7:13 [October 1993],
1265-1268.)
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin at Madison School of
Medicine reported that autoantibodies of unclear significance may be
found in 5% to 30% of women with silicone breast implants.(Archives of
Internal Medicine 153:23 [December 1993], 2638-2644.)
Researchers at Monash University in Clayton, Victoria, in Australia,
found that women with silicone implants (70 were studied) have
elevated levels of autoantibodies to collagen, in a manner highly
similar to women with lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. (Current Topics
in Microbiological Immunology 210 [1996], 307-316.)
Among 310 symptomatic women with silicone implants, there were
elevated levels of novel autoreactive antibodies to silicone
associated antigens(a specific type of heightened immune response)
compared to healthy women without implants.
(Current Topics in Microbiological Immunology 210 [1996], 327-336.)
Scientists at the Technical University of Munich in Germany examined
239 breast implant recipients and found the following immunological
abnormalities: levels of complement C3 were elevated in 42% of the
women; complement C4 was elevated in 21%; and antithyroglobulin (an
antibody that attacks a substance in the thyroid gland) was higher in
28%.
(Annals of Plastic Surgery 36:5 [May 1996], 512-518.)
When silicone leaks from implants, immune cells form granulomas
(microscopic lumps) around the droplets; the granulomas are capable of
severely disrupting the immune system. Silicone plays the role of an
adjuvant,providing constant nonspecific stimulation of the immune
system.(Journal of Investigative Surgery 9:1 [January/February 1996],
1-12.)
5. Silicone produces a classifiable new disease marked by autoimmune
symptoms.
Among physicians willing to credit silicone with toxicological and
immunological effects, a variety of names for silicone-induced disease
have been proposed: siliconosis, undifferentiated or atypical
connective tissue disease, silicone related disease, silicone reactive
disorder, silicone disease syndrome, and silicone implant disease
(SID).
Typical symptoms associated with silicone include cognitive
dysfunction, short-term memory loss, Sjögrenís syndrome
(dryness in glands, such as the mouth, kidneys, eyes, and lungs),
scleroderma, rheumatoid arthritis, dermatomyositis, severe joint and
muscle pain, incapacitating fatigue, swollen lymph glands, skin
problems, peripheral numbness, multiple allergies, headaches, hair
loss, sunlight sensitivity, central nervous system disorders (similar
to multiple sclerosis), and others.
Among 176 breast implant patients examined by doctors at the Hospital
for Joint Diseases, Orthopaedic Institute, in New York City, the most
frequently reported symptoms were chronic fatigue (77%), cognitive
dysfunction (65%), severe joint pain (56%), dry mouth (53%), dry eye
(50%), hair loss (40%), and difficulty in swallowing (35%). (Seminars
in Arthritis and Rheumatology 24:1 Suppl 1 [August 1994], 29-37.)
A study of 50 women with implants revealed that 89% complained of
fatigue, 75% of generalized stiffness, 71% of poor sleep, and 78% of
joint pain. Positive ANAs were found in 38% of these patients.
(Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatology 24:1 Suppl 1 [August 1994],
44-53.)
A study of 56 women with silicone implants and scleroderma (skin
thickening which damages tissues) revealed that scleroderma symptoms
developed an average of nine years after implantation. Of these, 77%
also had Raynaudís phenomenon (extreme skin pallor and coldness in
hands and feet), 53% had swallowing difficulties, 47% had lung
problems, and 83% had antinuclear antibodies. (Current Topics in
Microbiological Immunology 210 [1996], 283-90.)
Doctors at the CompreCare Clinic in Houston, Texas, found that 26
women developed a systemic disease with central nervous system
involvement (resembling multiple sclerosis) an average of 5.7 years
after receiving silicone implants.
(Southern Medical Journal 89:2 [February 1996], 179-88.)
Doctors at the Louisiana State University Medical Center at New
Orleans examined 300 women (average age, 44) with silicone implants
and musculoskeletal complaints. The symptoms developed an average of
6.8 years after receiving the implants; 83% had symptoms highly
suggestive of an underlying connective tissue disorder;and 54% met the
criteria for a fibromyalgia (chronic muscle pain) diagnosis. (Clinical
Rheumatology 14:6 [November 1995], 667-672.)
According to Douglas R. Shanklin, M.D., and David L. Smalley, M.D.,
both professors of pathology at the University of Tennessee at
Memphis, there is little if any difference between the effects of
direct injection [of silicone] and the effects of gel-filled devices
[implants].î
In either case, the human body reacts to the presence of this alien
substanceî by forming granulomas which then produce a chronic
inflammation. Direct injection of silicone into the breast for
enlargement was outlawed because it produced serious, toxic effects in
women; it is illogical, state Drs. Shanklin and Smalley, that this
practice is still permitted via ruptured leaking implants. (Science
and Medicine 3:5 [September/October 1996], 22-31.)
6. Silicone-associated symptoms go away when implants are removed.
Doctors at the University of Alabama at Birmingham observed that 103
of 142 women attributed a variety of symptoms to their implants and
that 50% of these women reported improvement in their health problems
when the implants were removed. (Annals of Plastic Surgery 34:1
[January 1995], 1-6.)
Of 33 women who underwent implant removal (average age 44), 24
experienced significant improvement in numerous silicone-associated
symptoms within 22 months. (Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatology
24:1 Suppl 1 [August 1994],
22-28.)
Among 300 women with implants and musculoskeletal complaints, 70% who
underwent implant removal reported improvement in their systemic
symptomatology. (Clinical Rheumatology 14:6 [November 1995], 667-672.)
Dermatologists at the Medical University of South Carolina at
Charleston report that when a woman, 46, with scleroderma had her
implants removed, the scleroderma gradually resolved.(Archives of
Dermatology 126:9 [September
1990], 1198-1202.)
Doctors at the University of California, Davis School of Medicine
report that for a woman with debilitating multisystem sarcoidosis
(multiorgan granulomas), her clinical condition dramatically
improved,after her silicone implants were removed. (International
Archives of Allergy and Immunology 105:4 [December 1994], 404-407.)
Canadian researchers polled 100 women for health changes they
experienced after having their silicone implants removed
(mean age 41) after having had the implants for a mean of 12 years.
After an average of 2.7 years, 45% of 75 women in this group (those
who had lost nipple sensitivity) believed, in retrospect, their
implants had caused permanent health problems and 43% were suing the
implant manufacturers.
Those women who had no previous signs of autoimmune symptoms responded
most favorably to explantationas 80% reported major improvementin
their symptoms and 93% said they had a significantly improved
psychological well-being.(Annals of Plastic Surgery 39:1 [1997],
9-19.)
Surely there is enough evidence to support the case that silicone
breast implants pose a serious potential health threat, if not for
every woman, at least for many. Isnít it therefore prudent to side
with cautionñhaving the implants removed and residual silicone
detoxified from the bodyñif the health ramifications of a procedure
are that uncertain?
Copyright © 1996. The Light Party.
The Light Party,
20 Sunnyside Ave., Suite A-156 Mill Valley, CA 94941. Tel: (415)
381-4061 * Fax: (415) 381-2645 Dedicated to "Health, Peace and Freedom
for All"
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