Does animal testing help human medicine?........33 facts to consider.
1) Less than 2% of human illnesses (1.16%) are ever seen in animals.
Over 98% never affect animals.
2) According to the former
scientific executive of Huntingdon Life Sciences, animal tests and human
results agree "5%-25% of the time."
3) Among the hundreds of
techniques available instead of animal experiments, cell culture toxicology
methods give accuracy rates of 80-85%
4) 92% of drugs passed by
animal tests immediately fail when first tried on humans because theyre
useless, dangerous or both.
5)
The two most common illnesses in the Western world are lung cancer from
smoking and heart disease. Neither can be reproduced in lab animals.
6) A 2004 survey of doctors in the UK showed that 83% wanted a
independent scientific evaluation of whether animal experiments had
relevance to human patients. Less than 1 in 4 (21%) had more confidence in
animal tests than in non-animal methods.
7) Rats are 37% effective in
identifying what causes cancer to humans less use than guessing. The
experimenters said: we would have been better off to have tossed a coin."
8) Rodents are the animals almost always used in cancer research. They
never get carcinomas, the human form of cancer, which affects membranes (eg
lung cancer). Their sarcomas affect bone and connective tissue: the two
arecompletely different.
9) The results from animal tests are
routinely altered radically by diet, light, noise, temperature, lab staff
and bedding. Bedding differences caused cancer rates of over 90% and almost
zero in the same strain of mice at different labs.
10)Sex differences
among lab animals can cause contradictory results. This does not correspond
with humans.
11)
75% of side effects identified in animals never occur.
12) Over half
of side effects cannot be detected in lab animals.
13) Vioxx was
shown to protect the heart of mice, dogs, monkeys and other lab animals. It
was linked to heart attacks and strokes in up to 139,000 humans.
14)
Genetically modified animals are not like humans. The mdx mouse is supposed
to have muscular dystrophy, but the muscles regenerate with no treatment.
15) GM animal the CF- mouse never gets fluid infections in the lungs
the cause of death for 95% of human cystic fibrosis patients.
16) In
America, 106,000 deaths a year are attributed to reactions to medical drugs.
17) Each year 2.1 million Americans are hospitalised by medical
treatment.
18) In the UK an estimated 70,000 people are killed or
severely disabled every year by unexpected reactions to drugs. All these
drugs have passed animal tests.
19) In the UKs House Of Lords
questions have been asked regarding why unexpected reactions to drugs (which
passed animal tests) kill more people than cancer.
20)
A German doctors' congress concluded that 6% of fatal illnesses and 25% of
organic illness are caused by medicines. All have been animal tested.
21) According to a thorough study, 88% of stillbirths are caused by
drugs which passed animal tests.
22) 61% of birth defects were found
to have the same cause.
23) 70% of drugs which cause human birth
defects are safe in pregnant monkeys.
24) 78% of foetus-damaging
chemicals can be detected by one non-animal test.
25) Thousands of
safe products cause birth defects in lab animals including water, several
vitamins, vegetable oils, oxygen and drinking waters. Of more than 1000
substances dangerous in lab animals, over 97% are safe in humans.
26)
One of the most common lifesaving operation (for ectopic pregnancies) was
delayed 40 years by vivisection.
27)
The great Dr Hadwen noted "had animal experiments been relied
upon...humanity would have been robbed of this great blessing of
anaesthesia."
28) Aspirin fails animal tests, as do digitalis (heart
drug), cancer drugs, insulin (which causes animal birth defects), penicillin
and other safe medicines. They would be banned if vivisection were believed.
29) Blood transfusions were delayed 200 years by animal studies.
30) The polio vaccine was delayed 40 years by monkey tests.
31) 30
HIV vaccines, 33 spinal cord damage drugs, and over 700 treatments for
stroke have been developed in animals. None work in humans.
32)
Despite many Nobel prizes going to vivisectors, only 45% agree that animal
experiments are crucial.
33) The Director of Research Defence
Society, (which serves only to defend vivisection) was asked if medical
progress could have been achieved without animal use. His written reply was
"I am sure it could be."
References
1) Page, Dr T, "Vivisection Unveiled", John Carpenter,
1997, p6
2) 'Animal Toxicity Studies:Their relevance to man Lumley &
Walker (ed) pp57-67, Quay, 1989
3) Clemedson C, McFarlane-Abdulla E,
Andersson M, et al. MEIC Evaluation of Acute Systemic Toxicity. ATLA
1996;24:273-311, http://www.pcrm.org/resch/anexp/in_vitro_tests.html
4) Nature Biotechnology 1998; 16:1294
5) Heart disease: Gross,
D, Animal Models in Cardiovascular Research, Martinus Nijhoff Pub 1985.
Smoking: New York Times, December 6 1993
6) GP survey (2004)
commissioned by patient safety group Europeans for Medical Progress
*www.safermedicines.net*
7) F J Di Carlo, Drug Metabolism
reviews15, p409-13
8) R Peto, World Medicine Vol 79, 1979
9)
D.Spani, M. Arras, B. Konig and T. Rulicke, 'Higher heart rate of laboratory
mice housed individually vs in pairs', Laboratory Animal Welfare, Vol. 37,
No. 1, Jan 2003, Science Magazine www.sciencemag.org Volume 298, Number
5602, Issue of 20 Dec 2002, p. 2321
10) EJ Calabrese, 'Toxic
Susceptability: Male/female differences, quoted in Page "Viv Unv.", p41
11) AP Fletcher in Proc R Soc med, 1978;71, 693
12) Clin
Pharmacol Ther 1962; pp665-672
13) Current Opinions in Lipidology,
BMJ 2005;330:212
14) Fletcher, AP et al, 1976 Stroke, vol 7,
pp135-142
15) Collins,PS. Wilson,JM. 1992. Nature. vol 358. p708 9)
Barinaga,M. 1992. Science. vol 257. p1047. Snouwaert,J N. Brigham,KK et al.
1992. Science. vol 257. pp1083-1088. Snouwaert,J N. Brigham,KK et al. 1992.
Science. vol 257. pp1083-1088
16) Journal of the American Medical
Association 14/4/98
17) Journal of the American Medical Association
14/4/98
18) Nature Medicine 2000; 6:502-503
19) Earl Baldwin
of Bewdley, Lords Hansard report 2/12/98
20) Professor Hoff, Congress
of clinical medicine, Wiesbaden, 1976
21) Munchner Medizinische
Wochenschrift, no 34 1969 quoted in Hans Reusch "Slaughter of the Innocent",
p365
22) Munchner Medizinische Wochenschrift, no 34 1969 quoted in
Hans Reusch "Slaughter of the Innocent", p365
23) Developmental
Toxicology: Mechanisms and Risk JA McLachlan, RM Pratt, C L Markert (Eds)
1987 p313
24) Biogenic Amines (Vol. 19, No. 2, pp. 97145 (2005)
25) Lewis, R. J., Sr. (1989). Saxs Dangerous Properties of Industrial
Materials. 7th edn. John Wiley, New York. Turbow, M. M., Clark, W. H.
and Dipaolo, J. A. (1971). Embryonic abnormalities in hamsters following
intrauterine injection of 6-aminonicotinamide, Teratology 4 (4), 427431
Beall, J. R. and Klein,M. F. (1977). Enhancement of aspirin-induced
teratogenicity by food restriction in rats,Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 39,
489495. Klein, K. L., Scott, W. J. and Wilson, J. G. (1981).
Aspirin-induced teratogenesis: a unique pattern of cell death and subsequent
polydactyly in the rat, J. Exper. Zool. 216, 107112.
Slone, D., Siskind, V., Heinonen, O. P., Monson, R. R., Kaufman, D. W. and
Shapiro, S. (1976). Aspirin and congenital malformations, Lancet 1,
13731375. Werler, M. M., Mitchell, A. A. and Shapiro, S.
(1989). The relation of aspirin use during the first trimester of pregnancy
to congenital cardiac defects, New Engl. J. Med. 321, 16391642.
Wilson, J. G. (1977). Current status of teratology. General principles and
mechanisms derived from animal studies, in: Handbook of Teratology, pp.
147. Plenum Press, New York.
26) Birmingham Daily Post, 4/10/1892
27) Dr Hadwen 'The difficulties of Deguerre, p357, & General
Anaesthesia, Gray/Utting/Nunn, p152
28) Aspirin & Insulin Hans Reush,
"Slaughter..", p364:Cancer, NAVS Campaigner 1988 Jab/Feb):Digitalis, Page
"Viv. Unv." p9 Penicillin , Mark Matfield, r2, Brian Hayes Show,19/4/94
29) K. Walker, The Story of Medicine, Hutchinson, 1954. R. McGrew,
Encyclopedia of Medical History, MacMillan Press, 1985. A. Gastiglioni, A
History of Medicine, (1947 edition translated by E.B. Krumbhaer) Ryerson
Press, 1941
30) Paul, JR, 1971 'A History of Poliomyelitis'. Yale
University Press, p385
31) Spinal cord: Journal of the American
Paralegic Society11;23-25, 1988Stroke: Nature Medicine 2002; 8 (1):5 Future
of neuroprotective drugs in doubt, also Stroke 1990 21: 1-3. HIV: Poignard
P, Sabbe R, Picchio GR, et al. (April 1999). "Neutralizing antibodies have
limited effects on the control of established HIV-1 infection in vivo".
Immunity 10 (4): 4318. doi:10.1016/S1074-7613(00)80043-6. ISSN 1074-7613.
PMID 10229186.
Berman PW, Gregory TJ, Riddle L, et al. (June 1990).
"Protection of chimpanzees from infection by HIV-1 after vaccination with
recombinant glycoprotein gp120 but not gp160". Nature 345 (6276): 6225.
doi:10.1038/345622a0. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 2190095.
Connor RI,
Korber BT, Graham BS, et al. (February 1998). "Immunological and virological
analyses of persons infected by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 while
participating in trials of recombinant gp120 subunit vaccines". Journal of
virology 72 (2): 155276. ISSN 0022-538X. PMID 9445059. PMC 124637:
http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=9445059
Morgan
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32) Research Defense Society Website, 1998
33) Written reply to
enquiry by member of the public quoted in "Viv. Unv.", p101
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