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Monday 16 August 2021

Pioglitazone for Autism and Specifically Summertime Raging and Verapamil-responsive Autism?

 


Adult-sized people with autism can cause property damage and much worse.


I am told that summertime raging is a common problem encountered by neurologists, but it remains poorly understood and usually remains untreated.

The most common worry for parents of toddlers diagnosed with severe autism is their lack of speech.

By the time these children reach adulthood, the biggest worry for parents is often aggression and self-injury. Often it is the mother who faces the worst episodes of aggression, which is a really cruel turn of events.

Aggression is usually not present in young children with autism, in some people it never develops, but in others it later becomes established as a learned behavior and then you are stuck with how to deal with it.

One of my own therapy targets has long been to improve cognitive function; this can indeed be achieved and then you can improve important daily living skills (adaptive function). Some steps that you can take to improve cognition, and indeed speech, have a downside in that they increase anxiety, which may lead to aggression. Calcium Folinate (Leucovorin) does cause aggression in a significant minority of people.  I think that low dose Roflumilast (60mcg) is cognitive enhancing, as proposed by the researchers at 100mcg, but it does seem to increase edginess/anxiety. DMF (Dimethyl fumarate) increases alertness, which is a good thing, but too much alertness will make you anxious.

When dealing with a full sized adult, which is more important, increased cognition/speech or avoiding explosive aggression?

Clearly there is a need for a compromise.

In adults with severe autism, living at home, entirely extinguishing aggressive behavior looks like the number one treatment goal.

For children in mainstream school, following the regular curriculum, cognitive function has to be a top priority.  Fortunately, this is our case, but only after starting Bumetanide therapy in 2012.

It looks like you can potentially have the best of both worlds - increased IQ and adaptive function, but without aggressive behavior. That is my own experience, but it was not simple.

Pioglitazone has been covered quite extensively in this blog and it is again featuring in the research. Pioglitazone is an interesting old drug used to treat people with type 2 diabetes; the phase 2 trial for autism has been completed.  I doubt there will be a phase 3 trial due to the high costs. Pioglitazone is broadly anti-inflammatory; it reduces the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6 and increases the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10.

We have seen in early posts how important is IL-6 and that it plays a key role in both allergy and even how milk teeth roots “dissolve” and then permanent teeth erupt. This transition to permanent teeth is another common cause of raging in autism, in our case it was mostly wintertime raging. 

IL-6, either directly or indirectly, seems to negatively affect behavior.

 

PPAR gamma

In earlier posts there was a lot about the various PPARs. These are used in medicine as targets to treat conditions like high cholesterol and type 2 diabetes.

Resveratrol and Pterostilbene are the OTC supplements that some readers are using. Sytrinol is another such supplement, but its cognitive benefit unfortunately just lasts a few days.

Here is a relatively recent paper on the subject, for those seeking the details. 

 

Nuclear Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors (PPARs) as Therapeutic Targets of Resveratrol for Autism Spectrum Disorder

 

Or just look up the old posts in this blog:- 


https://epiphanyasd.blogspot.com/search/label/PPAR%CE%B3


PPARs are rather complicated, but do seem to be very relevant.  For example, the master regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis, something called PGC-1 alpha, is activated by PPAR gamma. If you have mitochondrial dysfunction that included a reduced number of mitochondria, you might want to make more mitochondria. A PPAR gamma agonist might be beneficial.

Dysregulation of PGC-1 alpha is associated with neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders including Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and Huntington's.

Outside this blog, there is some interest in PGC-1 alpha and autism, particularly in connection with oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction.

 

“In conclusion, we demonstrated mitochondrial oxidative stress may affect a significant subgroup of ASD children and that the SIRT1/PGC-1α signaling pathway may be a promising medical treatment for ASD.”

Source: Role of SIRT1/PGC-1α in mitochondrial oxidative stress in autistic spectrum disorder


It does look like PPARs can be targeted and provide a benefit for at least some types of autism. My choice is Pioglitazone.

 

Dumber in the Summer

In parallel with summertime raging comes the phenomenon I called “Dumber in the Summer”, where cognitive function regresses.

Monty’s assistant told me recently there is no “Dumber in the Summer” this year, and I opened my medicine cupboard and explained why this is indeed the case.

At least in our case, when you resolve summertime raging, you also protect against cognitive regression. That therapy involves Verapamil, Pioglitazone and allergy therapies, Dymista spray (azelastine + fluticasone) plus Ceterizine and Clemastine. Clemastine also has the pro-myelination effect and stabilizes microglia.

 

Pioglitazone Side effects

In the stage 2 trials for autism doses of 0.25 mg/kg, 0.5 mg/kg and 0.75 mg/kg were all found to be safe and well tolerated.

As a summertime add-on therapy it appears very well tolerated.

In adults with type 2 diabetes, who will tend to be overweight and not so healthy, there are common side effects.  At one point, it was thought that there was an association between this drug and bladder cancer. Now this is thought not to be the case.

For adults with severe untreated autism, who are aggressive and self-injure, these behaviors very much limit where they can live and what they can do during the day. Life expectancy is also severely reduced. If Pioglitazone can help control these behaviors, some side effects are likely a price worth paying. 

 

Conclusion

Pioglitazone, by the standards of autism drugs, has plenty of evidence in the literature, regarding both mouse models and humans, to support an n=1 trial.  It addresses neuro-inflammation, one key feature of autism and it has beneficial effects on mitochondria.

Pioglitazone abolishes autistic-like behaviors via the IL-6 pathway

In a small cohort of autistic children, daily treatment with pioglitazone eased some autistic behaviors, such as irritability, lethargy, stereotypy, and hyperactivity, without significant side effects

 pioglitazone treatment inhibits the secretion of proinflammatory factors, such as nitric oxide and IL-6, and enhances the levels of the secretion of anti-inflammatory factors IL-4 and IL-10. Therefore, considering the results of Qiu and Li and our present findings, pioglitazone acted to benefit autistic-like behaviors possibly via the inhibition of IL-6 secretion in astrocytes stimulated by LPS, which inhibited the neuroinflammatory response.

 

I think for people whose child with autism has a behavioural or cognitive regression in summer, there is good reason to expect a benefit.  They very likely have allergies or other autoimmune conditions.

For people who deal with aggression and self-injury in a person who responds partially, but not 100%, to Verapamil, they may find that Pioglitazone helps to complete their anti-aggression therapy.

Our doctor reader Agnieszka did her best to collect case studies of people with autism responsive to Verapamil, but not enough parents wanted to participate.

Based on the comments section in this blog, it would look like our reader George in Romania has a son whose son’s aggression is reduced by Verapamil.  If some aggression persists in summer, I think there is a very good chance that Pioglitazone will help reduce it.  George did recently share with us the the anti-inflammatory Probiotic Lactobacillus Plantarum 299v, from the previous post and widely used for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), improved his son's speech.  

Note that the research clearly shows that most autism has an "inflammatory" element, but the exact nature varies (for details read the work of Paul Ashwood at the MIND Institute).  There are very many different anti-inflammatory therapies that are reported to benefit specific people, but there are no unifying therapies that work for all. Some will inevitably make non-responders worse and potentially dramatically so, like L.reuteri ATCC PTA 6475, found in Biogaia Gastrus. Trial and error seems unavoidable if you want to find an effective therapy.

The research proposes Pioglitazone as a year round therapy for idiopathic autism.  In the phase 2 trial almost half of the children were deemed to be responders to the treatment; not a bad result. I think it also has potential as just a summertime add-on therapy. We used it last summer and now again this summer.

People with a diagnosis of mitochondrial disease, who also present with lethargy, might be another target group because of PGC-1 alpha.





35 comments:

  1. We currently have the terrible combo of a teeth falling out and Ragweed allergy season. In all previous years, this would mean that we wouldn’t have a chance at normalcy. Right now, with her monthly IVIGs, I can barely notice the effects of both problems. However, we also use oral and spray antihistamines and air filters for bedrooms.
    Out of boredom, we introduced NAC - at 2400mg per day (hopefully - we use Now foods NAC and I don’t know if the capsules really contain 600mg). She does seem more there and cognitively able.
    We also started using Gemiini. It seems a good approach for kids prone to scripting and with problems in receptive speech.
    One of the things I regret we did when our child was little is to heed the advice of local speech therapists and exclude all sources of english language from her.
    If it is in your options to completely focus on english from young age onwards, I would in hindsight do that. There just are amazing apps and options for learning in english, such as Khan Academy, Endless Alphabet, Gemiini and many more.
    A few years ago she simply started demanding english and we provided her with learning sources. She is (as far as she is verbal) bilingual now and it helps so much.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hello Tpes, I have been using Rosetta Stone for language learning on the computer, I'm using it for our own language which is Spanish and I set it so the lessons are longer and they are more repetitive especially with lessons the system detects a lower score, my son seems to like it, it has voice recognition so in some lessons he has to say the words or frases out loud and the system marks them as correct or not, it also has lessons in which you have to pick the image according to the frase and he likes that. He has learned to speak a bit more clearly and had a lot of gains, just days ago he had somekind of regression and it's as he has forgotten words. We're practicing Spanish for now, but my intention is to continue with English and there are many languages available. I downloaded it from a torrent site, so it has had no cost for me.

      Delete
    2. that is actually a good idea. I will look into it.

      Delete
  2. Hi Peter,
    I hesitate to share positive news as,
    generally speaking, my experience is that positive benefits don't seem to outlast a couple weeks.
    We started using TMG (10 g/day) about 7 weeks ago.
    I then increased NAC to more like 3000 mg /day , spread out throughout the day. I had forgotten that I had reduced it quite some time ago.My son's mood and rages were increased even before summer and heat. I wondered if ramping up NAC again would help.
    I added an extra dose midday of B vitamins as NAC had been increased.
    About 3 weeks ago, my son's flexibility and general mood seemed better.Something about him seemed more "present". Not only were rages greatly reduced in frequency, but he has been smiling more than I have seen in years. There was a day recently when it seemed like we almost had a back and forth genuine exchange, though with few words.
    His vocalizations are far more frequent.

    Could this be the TMG?
    I accidentally and strangely stumbled upon this recently:
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/322705396_Therapeutic_Cocktail_Approach_for_Treatment_of_Hyperhomocysteinemia_in_Alzheimer's_Disease
    I am not science-minded like most on this blog, though I deeply appreciate and benefit from the thinking here.
    I welcome your thoughts.
    Nancy

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nancy, the words "more present" are the common ones used by parents seeing the effect of bumetanide. It was this effect that we hoped to see from high dose TMG.

    So it appears that your son is very likely a bumetanide-responder like my son. This is a lifetime therapy. You either stick with TMG or try and get bumetanide.

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  4. Do you think bumetanide would yield more benefits than TMG if, in fact, he is a responder?

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    Replies
    1. It certainly is possible. We do not know the equivalent dose. I would suggest the dose my son takes, which is 2mg of bumetanide once a day.

      Delete
  5. Hi Peter

    I’m looking for a good European doctor to prescribe Leucovorin and or Bumetanide?

    Some of the doctors mentioned in your past blog posts are no longer contactable, I am unable to make contact with Agnieszka on her email & Dr Ramaekers I hear is now retired.

    I assume these were specialist hard to find practitioners who treated autism and one cannot just turn up at any European Doctors practice expecting these things?

    On a separate matter anyone in the UK interested in participating in spectrum 10k, the UK`s largest genetic research study of autism see below link:-

    https://spectrum10k.org/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ross, Dr Ramaekers may still have his private practice, send an email to ask.

      You could try Tatjana's doctor in Italy, just google Dr Antonucci Autism.

      It is only in US where there are many autism doctors.

      Delete
  6. Any thoughts on this? https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11595349/

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    Replies
    1. DHHB is derived from magnolia bark / honokiol. This is originally from Korean medicine and was covered once in this blog. I think I even bought some once.

      I think it actually has multiple effects other than the one in your paper.

      They now sell an expensive supplement of DHHB which they say is much more potent than the cheap magnolia bark.

      It seems to work for some types of anxiety.

      Delete
  7. it seems to work along the same lines as bumetanide?

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    Replies
    1. Tatjana, the paper is telling us that Honokiol has a chloride lowering effect, like bumetanide. However, among the other known effects of Honokiol is the anti-anxiety effect most likely mediated by GABAa receptors. So, Honokiol likely has an effect similar to Valium and other benzodiazepine drugs.

      The problem for Bumetanide responders is while one effect of Honokiol is helpful, the effect on GABAa receptors is likely to be harmful. This is because it appears that Bumetanide is only partially effective, so it shifts GABA from being excitatory to less excitatory, but not all the way to inhibitory, where it should be. That is indeed in my son’s case, but not necessarily in that of all bumetanide responders.

      Honokiol also has an effect on PPAR gamma, so it might be a good choice for someone with anxiety and type 2 diabetes, or perhaps high cholesterol.

      Delete
  8. Peter, we did the S100B test and her values are double the normal. Would you use Brillia or Tenoten?

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    Replies
    1. Tatjana, elevated S100B in blood samples is very common in autism but there is no consensus on what this means.

      It does not necessarily even mean that S100B is elevated in the brain.

      "The mechanisms of increased S100B in ASD are not completely clear, but several mechanisms have been proposed. First, autoimmunity may be involved in the development of ASD. Brain-specific autoantibodies have been found in individuals with ASD. Autoantibodies can bind to brain tissue antigens by passing through the blood–brain barrier, forming immune complexes and leading to neuronal damage. Elevated S100B levels may indicate neuronal damage in ASD. Second, neuroinflammation was found in the brains of individuals with ASD. It has been reported that S100B may modulate cytokine secretion and may also be modulated by pro-inflammatory cytokines . S100B may function as a cytokine and support the implication of neuroinflammation in the development of ASD. Third, S100B has both trophic and toxic effects on neurons, depending on its concentration. When S100B levels are excessively increased, S100B acts as a neurotoxic protein that induces apoptosis. Ayaydın H et al reported that S100B plays an important role in neuronal apoptosis, which may contribute to the pathogenesis of ASD. The pathophysiological roles of S100B in ASD are not well explained, and more studies are warranted to verify this assumption in the future."

      source:
      https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10803-020-04710-1

      Within the brain a little bit extra of S100B can enhance cognition, but large amounts are damaging.

      The Russians are the ones using S100B as a target. You mention Tenoten a preparation based on ultralow-dose antibodies to S100 proteins and intended for the therapy of anxious and depressive disorders. Tenoten is given to Russian children to raise cognition.

      Some readers of this blog have tried Tenoten.

      Since your child responds to IVIG, I think the elevated S100B may just be another sign of her auto-immune features. In other words there may be no benefit targeting S100B, rather you would target why it is elevated, which you are already doing.

      Delete
    2. One of my ideas is to test for it again after every next IVIG. The IVIGs are helping so much that I have no reference for her next one - she was never as well as now, I don’t know how to imagine her even better.
      Thanks for the long answer. I read this: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10803-020-04710-1
      And I think it makes sense to try Tenoten/Brillia. I also have a consult next week with a russian doctor who is, amazingly, both specialized as a neurologist and an immunologist. Since most research on this protein is in russian, he might have a more informed approach. I will let you know.

      Delete
  9. and also, what else would you do? obviously her brain is suffering.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Hello Peter,
    We have long experienced what you have described as summertime rage and cognitive regression. We have used 20 mg of Verapamil as needed and it leads to rage calming in about 20 minutes. Recently, a lab test revealed that my son has high levels of blood histamine. During the summer regression, likely allergic given that it is seasonal, happens each year at the same time, and comes on when other family members experience more typical allergic symptoms (asthma, eczema, sneezing etc) we have used Dymista during the day and Clemastine at bedtime, which seem to help cognition a great deal but not completely and we plan to try pioglitazone in addition as you recommend. What work ups would you recommend for high blood histamine? We have tried Neuroprotek and it did not have any noticeable effect on rage or cognition. Should we screen for mast cell disorder? What else can be done for high histamine? Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The better you can control the summertime allergy, the lower histamine levels will be. You could look into allergy shots for various types of pollen.

      There is a 24 urine test for histamine, but I think you already know the source of the problem.

      You could take Verapamil more often, if it is well tolerated. It is normally taken daily.

      I think Pioglitazone is likely to help.

      Delete
  11. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  12. We have finally found a tool to help us with our efforts - the app Symple Symptom Tracker. It enables you to statistically track how factors (both provided by the app or your custom ones) correlate with symptoms (again, can be custom). It also can send reminders thiugh I have not yet explored that option. It has a classic diary entry place where you can just type impressions of the day, and photos can be added in another section. Its shareable - that means you can have input from different care providers or family members in one place. Not yet sure how the data is exported. We put medication names as factors, and also if there were two or more daily doses we named them Medname 1 and Medname 2 so its visible if a dose gets missed. The app shows when you wrote a symptom or factor in, which means you can also track time correlation through the day (say, a symptom is always half an hour after medication). I LOVE it. I believe it can help parents like us.

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  13. Hypoglycemia is listed as a fairly common side effect of pioglitazone (which makes sense). Peter, I believe you mentioned at one point that your son had low blood sugar? Mine has issues with this, and I’m wondering whether this means we shouldn’t try pioglitazone, or maybe we should monitor it somehow?

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    Replies
    1. Sara, in the clinical trial they did monitor blood glucose and did not report any problems. It would make sense to use the lower of the 3 trialed doses which was 0.25 mg/kg and check blood glucose. The 3 month glucose test (known as the hemoglobin A1C or HbA1c test) is the good one, assuming you make a trial that long.

      Delete
  14. My son has been on pioglitazone for a few weeks now. The major effect I've noticed seems to be a normalization of his sleep patterns. If that sustains itself, it would be a big improvement even if there are no other effects. And better sleep seems like it also might have good longer-term cognitive effects.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sara, keep us all informed about the effects long term.

      Delete
    2. So far the sleep is maintaining itself, which is good, and his therapist also asked us if we had noticed his language getting more complex - she had noted that he had started to use more complicated prepositional phrases. Though he has also just been in proper school for the first three weeks in his life, so there may be an effect from that as well.

      Delete
    3. Sara, that all sounds good. At some point, make a pause in the therapy and see the effect.

      When it comes to sleep problems, sometimes after "regularizing" sleep patterns with a therapy you can stop the therapy and keep the benefit. This seems to apply to low dose Mirtazapine.

      Delete
  15. I seem to have an extreme version of the "summertime raging" that happens to me year round. In my case, it is not just pollen, but anything that makes me hot/sweat that triggers mood swings/anxiety/irritability.

    Taking hot showers, running, eating spicy foods/hot soups all make me sweat, and then leave me angry and irritable for hours. It wasn't until I took verapamil that much of my depression suddenly vanished. Verapamil also cooled down my body by a lot. I can stand in the sun now without becoming incredibly sweaty.

    I suspect in many cases of summertime raging, CACNA1C dysfunctions + heat = mast cell degranulation and inflammation.

    It is just a shame that medicine has not caught up yet to what has been known in the literature for decades, and that a simple remedy (verapamil) already exists.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A recurring theme is that people make a discovery, which to them is a big deal, but the world is not interested. It takes a great deal of effort - first patents then clinical trials etc, to get anything much to change.

      A cheap drug like verapamil is not going to get officially repurposed because there is no financial interest to do so.

      Clever ideas then get forgotten.

      Delete
  16. Hi Peter, how many hours the effect of Pioglitazone dose would be present. Also is it given only once a day. I want to share observations, continuous use of ketotifen 0.5 mg for 1 or 2 weeks or cetirizine for a week escalated sever food cravings in my son. So we dont use them often.

    Thanks
    Sudhakar

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It is given once a day and the effect lasts all day.

      Delete
  17. Hi Peter,

    I missed to share, on health coach site read that MCAS would trigger vascular congestion i.e. hypercoagulation, is it the same as SIB episodes that happen when histamine flare occurs.

    Thanks
    Sudhakar

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Vascular congestion is really just too much blood flow.

      During SIB you might well see the persons face change color to red.

      Is SIB caused by too much blood flow to the brain? It could be in some people. I think the problem in my son's
      case is due to inflammatory mediators crossing into the brain as a result of an event outside the brain.

      Delete
  18. Hi Peter, do you think summer time rage has anything to do with increase in testosterone and estrogen or reducing them may help the situation. Did you noted these hormone levels in blood tests. https://recoveringkids.com/2018/01/10/androgens/comment-page-12/#comments . came across this for mast cells and leaky gut https://diaryofrecovery.com/2024/02/06/kpvpeptide-2/

    Thanks
    Sudhakar

    ReplyDelete
  19. Dear Peter,
    When you use Pioglitazone do you also use other antihistamines such as verapamil or cetirizine etc. Or Pioglitazone alone is sufficient . Our Dr recommended Pioglitazone 15mg/day.
    Thanks
    Sudhakar

    ReplyDelete

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