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Monday, 29 September 2025

From Conception to Early Childhood: Managing pain, fever, and neurodevelopmental risk. Time to apply some common sense? Time for NAC?

 

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Donald Trump recently reignited debate about Tylenol (paracetamol/acetaminophen) in pregnancy. His comments drew attention to research linking prenatal use to higher rates of autism and ADHD.

A large review of 46 studies, including work from Harvard, found consistent associations between paracetamol in pregnancy and neurodevelopmental risks. The FDA now advises caution: use the lowest dose for the shortest time.

 

Tylenol in pregnancy linked to higher autism risk, Harvard scientists report

Researchers reviewing 46 studies found evidence linking prenatal acetaminophen (Tylenol) exposure with higher risks of autism and ADHD. The FDA has since urged caution, echoing scientists’ advice that the drug be used only at the lowest effective dose and shortest duration. While important for managing fever and pain in pregnancy, prolonged use may pose risks to fetal development. Experts stress careful medical oversight and further investigation.

 Why the concern?

  • Paracetamol depletes glutathione (GSH), the body’s main antioxidant.
  • This raises oxidative stress in both mother and fetus.
  • The fetus has weak antioxidant defences, so damage may occur during critical brain development.

But here is the dilemma: the fever, pain, or inflammation that drives a mother to take paracetamol is itself risky. We have long known from maternal immune activation models that fever and cytokine surges in pregnancy can disturb fetal brain development and cause autism or schizophrenia. There is also evidence linking maternal immune activation to ADHD in the offspring.

So, what is the solution? Pair paracetamol with NAC.


Why NAC?

  • NAC (N-acetylcysteine) is a precursor to glutathione.
  • It’s used worldwide in emergency rooms to save lives after paracetamol/ acetaminophen overdose.
  • In pregnancy, NAC has been shown to reduce miscarriage risk by 50%,

N-acetyl cysteine for treatment of recurrent unexplained pregnancy loss

      • Increased pregnancy continuation: Women receiving NAC and folic acid were 2.9 times more likely to continue their pregnancies beyond 20 weeks compared to those receiving folic acid alone
      • Higher take-home baby rate: The NAC group had a 1.98 times higher rate of delivering a live baby.
      • These findings suggest that NAC, an antioxidant, may help mitigate oxidative stress, a factor implicated in pregnancy loss.

  

A combined Paracetamol/acetaminophen + NAC pill would:

  • Prevent liver toxicity,
  • Buffer oxidative stress in the fetus,
  • Eliminate the overdose suicide risk that haunts current paracetamol use.

So far, no company has produced it. Perhaps the “rotten egg” smell of NAC is a barrier—but solid sustained-release tablets avoid this.

 

Why Paracetamol/acetaminophen use is problematic in under 5s

Paracetamol depletes glutathione (GSH), the body’s primary antioxidant, increasing oxidative stress. A fetus with some genetic predispositions might already be in a state of oxidative stress, as might the mother

Paracetamol is mainly metabolized in the liver. A small fraction is metabolized into NAPQI — a reactive toxic metabolite. Glutathione (GSH) neutralizes NAPQI by forming a harmless conjugate.

If GSH stores are low (or paracetamol is taken in high doses), NAPQI accumulates, causing liver toxicity and GSH is exhausted raising oxidative stress.

Acute oxidative stress can be very damaging to developing brains. The risk after 5 years old fades away, other than in those who have already exhibited a profound metabolic/mitochondrial condition.


Why Oxidative Stress Rises in Pregnancy

Placental development: Early pregnancy is low-oxygen; as blood flow increases, oxygen surges and generates reactive oxygen species (ROS).

High metabolic demand: The mother and placenta require much more energy, leading to increased mitochondrial ROS.

Immune adaptations: Pregnancy involves a shift in maternal immunity, with inflammatory cytokines contributing to oxidative stress.

Fetal growth: Rapid cell division and organ development naturally produce oxidative byproducts, while the fetus’s antioxidant defenses are immature.

Limited antioxidant reserves: Maternal antioxidants (glutathione, vitamins C & E, enzymes) are partly depleted as pregnancy progresses.

 

Compounding Risk Factors

Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS): Associated with high androgens, insulin resistance, and chronic inflammation. These increase oxidative stress and are linked to higher autism risk in offspring.

Gestational Diabetes: Maternal hyperglycemia and insulin resistance increase ROS, damage the placenta, and expose the fetus to oxidative and metabolic stress.

Other amplifiers: Obesity, infection, fever, or poor nutrition further elevate oxidative stress.

 

How Oxidative Stress Affects the Fetus

Neurodevelopmental disruption: ROS can damage neural stem cells, impair migration, and disturb synapse formation.

Epigenetic reprogramming: Oxidative stress alters DNA methylation and gene expression, shaping long-term brain function.

Immune activation: Inflammatory cytokines cross the placenta and disturb fetal brain development.

Mitochondrial dysfunction: ROS damage fetal mitochondria, reducing energy for developing neurons.

Neurotransmitter imbalance: Antioxidant depletion disrupts glutamate/GABA balance and monoamine systems.

 

Consequences for the Unborn Child

Most pregnancies manage oxidative stress without harm, thanks to maternal–fetal antioxidant defences.

When oxidative stress overwhelms these defences—especially in mothers with PCOS, GDM, or infections—the risk of complications rises:

Preterm birth, growth restriction, or preeclampsia

Higher vulnerability to neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and ADHD.

Genetic predispositions in antioxidant or mitochondrial pathways may make some fetuses especially sensitive to these oxidative challenges.

Pregnancy naturally involves a controlled increase in oxidative stress, but when combined with maternal conditions like PCOS, gestational diabetes, or acute infections, the oxidative burden can exceed protective capacity. This imbalance may impair placental function and fetal brain development, increasing the risk of adverse outcomes, including autism. 

 

Pregnancy: Choosing safer options for pain and fever

  • Paracetamol → Remains the best option if pain relief is absolutely needed, but should be paired with NAC.
  • NSAIDs (ibuprofen, mefenamic acid) → Unsafe in later pregnancy due to fetal kidney damage and premature closure of the ductus arteriosus. Premature closure of the ductus arteriosus is a serious condition that occurs when the fetal blood vessel connecting the pulmonary artery to the aorta closes before birth. Do not use NSAIDs!
  • NAC supplementation → Low-cost, safe, and evidence-backed for reducing oxidative stress.

 

Infancy and Early Childhood

  • Paracetamol
    • Licensed from birth.
    • Effective for pain and fever, but still depletes glutathione.
    • In at-risk infants (metabolic or mitochondrial issues), consider pairing with NAC.
  • NSAIDs (ibuprofen, Ponstan)
    • Suitable from 3–6 months (depending on guidelines).
    • Do not deplete glutathione, making them safer for oxidative stress.
    • Hydration matters to protect kidneys.

 

Vaccinations, Fever, and Oxidative Stress

Vaccines work by briefly activating the immune system. This triggers a short burst of oxidative stress—far smaller than that caused by actual infections.

  • Healthy children clear this easily.
  • At-risk children (mitochondrial disease, metabolic errors, weak antioxidant systems) may struggle, leading to fatigue, regression-like symptoms, or metabolic instability.

Medication choices around vaccines

  • NSAIDs → Good for post-vaccine fever. Avoid routine pre-dosing to prevent dampening immunity, unless the child is in the at-risk group.
  • Paracetamol → Pre-vaccine dosing can reduce antibody production and reduce GSH. Post vaccine should be paired with NAC.
  • Montelukast → Anti-inflammatory, theoretically helpful in at-risk children, but not tested in trials, but is used at metabolic/mitochondrial clinics treating children.
  • NAC → Biologically plausible support for antioxidant status, though not studied formally in this setting.

Mainstream pediatrics avoids routine prophylactic anti-inflammatories, but some specialists (e.g., Dr. Kelley, Johns Hopkins) do use them selectively in fragile children. Using paracetamol without NAC is a bad idea.

 

Metabolic Decompensation: The Hidden Risk

Some children with mitochondrial or metabolic disorders cannot handle stress from fever or illness. This can trigger:

  • Energy failure (low ATP)
  • Accumulation of toxic metabolites (lactate, ammonia)
  • Seizures or regression

In developing brains, these crises can leave permanent autism-like features and/or intellectual disability. These symptoms are secondary to brain injury. Prevention is key:

  • Hydration, glucose support
  • Early fever control
  • Antioxidant support (NAC, vitamins C & E)

 

Key Takeaways

  • Pregnancy: If pain relief is needed, paracetamol + NAC is safer than paracetamol alone. Avoid NSAIDs.
  • Infancy: Paracetamol is widely used, but NSAIDs are safer from 3 months onward when oxidative stress is a concern.
  • Vaccination: Vaccines prevent far greater oxidative stress from infections. At-risk children may benefit from antioxidant or anti-inflammatory support, but this should be individualized.
  • Metabolic decompensation: Recognize and prevent crises in vulnerable children—this reduces risk of secondary neurodevelopmental injury.

 

Conclusion

Paracetamol has been trusted for decades, but its link with oxidative stress and neurodevelopmental risk is becoming harder to ignore. A Paracetamol + NAC pill makes both medical and common sense—safer for mothers, safer for children, and suicide-proof.

Until then, thoughtful use of NAC, NSAIDs, and tailored fever management could make a real difference in protecting brain development from conception through early childhood.

 

My original draft post was rather long, so here is the “optional” part 2, for any avid readers out there!

 

 

Part 2: Vaccines, Oxidative Stress, and Children at Risk

Why some kids may react differently — and what parents and clinicians can do

Vaccines are one of the greatest public health achievements, protecting children from infections that would otherwise cause significant illness, hospitalization, or death. But for children with mitochondrial disorders, metabolic diseases, or weak antioxidant systems, even routine vaccination can temporarily stress the body.


How Vaccines Trigger Oxidative Stress

  • Vaccination works by activating the immune system, prompting cytokine release, mild inflammation, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production.
  • In healthy children, this burst is short-lived. Antioxidant defences like glutathione, superoxide dismutase, and dietary vitamins C & E neutralize ROS quickly.
  • In children with mitochondrial or metabolic vulnerabilities, baseline ROS is already elevated, and antioxidant defences may be limited. A small extra load from vaccination can feel disproportionately stressful.

 

Why Some Children React Differently

Mitochondrial Disorders

  • Mitochondria produce ATP and ROS. Dysfunction means higher baseline oxidative stress and lower energy reserves.
  • A vaccine-induced oxidative spike can linger longer, leading to fatigue, metabolic stress, or regression-like symptoms.

Metabolic Disorders

  • Children with amino acid, fatty acid, or urea cycle defects have limited antioxidant capacity.
  • ROS accumulation may overwhelm defences, causing secondary mitochondrial stress or toxic metabolite build-up.

Genetic Variants

  • Some children carry variants that reduce glutathione production or antioxidant enzyme activity (e.g., GSTM1/GSTT1 deletions, MTHFR variants, impaired SOD/catalase).
  • Even minor oxidative challenges can temporarily disturb synapse formation, neurotransmitter balance, and myelination in the developing brain.

 

Medications Around Vaccination

NSAIDs

  • Symptom-driven use for fever or pain post-vaccine is generally safe.
  • Routine prophylactic use is usually avoided because it can reduce antibody responses, but specialists consider this is likely minimal

Paracetamol

  • Pre-vaccine dosing can modestly blunt antibody formation in some vaccines and is unwise because it reduces GSH just before it will be needed most.
  • Post-vaccine, symptom-driven use is often considered safe, but is unwise due to the ruction in GSH when needed most
  • High-risk children should always avoid paracetamol unless paired with NAC to protect glutathione and limit oxidative stress.

NAC (N-acetylcysteine)

  • Biologically plausible support for antioxidant status in at-risk children.
  • Safely used during pregnancy and by babies
  • Not yet studied in formal vaccine trials, but safe and used in clinical settings for other oxidative stress conditions.

Montelukast

  • Anti-inflammatory, may reduce oxidative stress, but not proven for vaccine prophylaxis.
  • Used by children at vaccination time when already prescribed it for asthma/allergic disease.

 

Managing Vaccination in At-Risk Children

1.     Ensure good hydration, feeding, and metabolic stability before vaccination.

2.     Monitor closely for post-vaccine fever, fatigue, or regression-like symptoms.

3.     Have supportive measures ready:

o    NAC or other antioxidant support

o    Symptom-driven NSAIDs

o    Avoid paracetamol unless paired with NAC

o    Quick access to a specialist if metabolic stress occurs

 

Takeaways for Parents and Clinicians

  • Vaccines do cause a small, transient oxidative stress, but it is far less than the oxidative burden from infections.
  • Children with mitochondrial or metabolic vulnerabilities may need extra care before and after vaccination.
  • NAC, hydration, symptom-driven NSAIDs, and careful monitoring can reduce risk without compromising immunity.
  • Always coordinate with a metabolic or mitochondrial specialist when planning vaccination for high-risk children.

By understanding oxidative stress, supporting antioxidant defences, and tailoring care, parents and clinicians can protect both immunity and neurodevelopment.

Since most parents, in reality, do not have access a mitochondrial specialist it pays to do your homework in advance. All the needed resources are in plain view.

You do wonder why nobody makes a combined Paracetamol/acetaminophen + NAC pill.

Such a pill is perfect for pregnant women.

Nobody would be able to commit suicide with this pill. This pill blocks the harmful effect on the liver that ultimately can lead to death.

NAC does smell of rotten eggs. One argument against such a pill is that it would stink and pregnant women are often feeling nausea. If the pill is solid (like NAC Sustain) there is no smell of rotten eggs. So you certainly can have a combined pill.

Personally, I would ban all liquid formulations of Paracetamol, other than for babies under 3 months. Many countries have long used exclusively Ibuprofen or Ponstan for children. Once a child is 5 years old the potential for paracetamol to do neurodevelopmental harm should have faded.

You can give babies NAC, it is sold in a liquid form for this purpose. NAC acts as a mucolytic, meaning it thins mucus in the airways.

How common is Metabolic Decompensation as a cause of severe autism? We know it exists, but I think we will never know how common it is. Hannah Poling is the best-known example. Evidence of an inconvenient truth.





 

15 comments:

  1. Great post Peter, I have found antioxidants are essential in the treatment of folate receptor autoantibodies. Along with Leucovorin and Xolair, Im a huge fan of CoQ10 and Cysteine rich whey protein right now.

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    1. Stephen, it looks like oxidative stress is a key feature of many conditions and there is a wide range of OTC therapies. It is great that you have found what works well for your kids. More people should do the same.

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  2. I read the transcript of the conference. The part about don't give your child tylenol post vaccine definitely made me think of what I have read here! I gave the same advice to a friend whose child developed a post vaccine fever.

    Peter, in a different post you wrote about glutamate excitotoxicity. How common do you think that is as a cause of severe autism? Could an inflammatory event also be a contributing trigger, that adds just a little more glutamate that can push a vulnerable child over the edge?

    Also, do you think Dr. Boles would be helpful for a child with genetic variants for highly responsive glutamate receptors? If that vulnerability led to the sort of severe regression you wrote about in the glutamate excitotoxicity post, is it too late to do anything about glutamate?

    Thanks,
    Grace

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    1. Glutamate excitotoxicity a common mechanism involved in many neurological and neurodevelopmental conditions, but it is not usually the sole cause of the condition.

      In the extreme it leads to cell death, but in mild or moderate cases, neurons often survive but become metabolically impaired and less connected, leading to the kind of regression and plateau. That is why you sometimes see partial or even major recovery years later, when oxidative stress, inflammation, or GABA–glutamate imbalance is corrected.

      Many children who regressed years ago still have chronic low-grade excitotoxicity, driven by oxidative stress, inflammation, or mitochondrial dysfunction.

      So while acute excitotoxicity can cause permanent loss if severe, in most regressive cases it likely leaves a partially reversible excitatory–inhibitory imbalance rather than fixed damage.

      Excitotoxic or inflammatory stress can push neurons back toward an immature, excitatory GABA state, and such people would likely be bumetanide responders.

      Other common therapies that could well be effective would include NAC, magnesium, taurine, memantine, ALCAR, coQ10, vitamin D3, vitamin K2 (MK-4) and ALA.

      You could talk to Dr Boles, he is very friendly.

      I think some degree of excitoxicity is common in those with severe autism. Estimates suggest 10–30% in severe/regressive cases. It would be higher in those with epilepsy.

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    2. Thanks for your response. My daughter's regression was what I think they call stepwise - she had an abrupt loss in social engagement, with spoken language and motor planning (like drinking from a cup) falling off over a month or two. No trigger that we saw. It's probably not possible to tell from that pattern whether it was a mild/moderate vs. a severe regression? She also did go on to have a seizure almost 3 years after the regression, but has been seizure free for 6 months on Keppra.

      I have of course read a lot about bumetanide here, and have wondered if my daughter would be a responder. She did respond to her benzodiazepine seizure rescue medicine. Is that a sign GABA is functioning in its normal inhibitory manner?

      I will look into those antioxidants. It's definitely encouraging to think some recovery is possible.

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    3. Grace, there is a lot of detective work required to figure out a case of severe autism.

      In your case you have:

      Stepwise developmental regression with no obvious trigger
      Later onset of seizures that respond well to Keppra and positive response to a benzodiazepine
      Most importantly, she is a girl

      When a girl shows moderate to severe autism, regression, and seizures, the likelihood of finding a genetic cause is significantly higher than in boys.

      When a girl is affected, it often means there is a stronger underlying biological driver. In other words, girls seem to have a kind of natural protective buffer against autism, and it usually takes a more disruptive genetic change to push development off track.

      Genetic testing finds a clear cause in up to half of girls with significant autism or developmental regression, compared to perhaps 15–25% of boys.

      If you live in North America one very good choice would be GeneDx’s extended autism/ID panel. This looks at far more autism/ID genes than other labs. Our reader Sue just informed me that the cost, if you pay yourself, is about $1,000. She had testing via insurance previously, but it was not extensive (and probably cost more).

      Keppra does not target a single ion channel or receptor, unlike many epilepsy drugs. Instead, it regulates how much neurotransmitter (especially glutamate) is released from neurons. When Keppra helps, it usually means that the brain’s excitatory signaling is too strong and there is too much glutamate release and not enough inhibitory control from GABA.

      Your daughter is not going to be to be a super-responder to Bumetanide, but she might get some benefit. GABA is clearly inhibitory in her case, but is it inhibitory enough? Is a nudge from bumetanide going to give a noticeable benefit. The only way to know it via a trial.

      I would go for the best genetic testing option that is open to you, as the next step.

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    4. Thanks, Peter. I didn't know that about girls and genetic causes found.

      We did have the GeneDx testing done. The main variant they found is a very rare epigenetic one, inherited from me. I don't want to say its name here for privacy reasons. But it is associated with mild to moderate ID, with epilepsy in around 40% of children, and (in studies) with dysregulated NMDA receptors. It's not clear whether it's hypo or hyper expression, but I know from this blog that either way increases the excitotoxicity risk.

      My daughter also has a second variant, also inherited from me. This one is a relatively common RASopathy, with seizures being unusual, and I know from family history that it's pretty mild by itself. But I've read that there is a slight tendency toward excitatory/inhibitory imbalance. Combined with the rare variant, I could easily see how my daughter was at a very high risk of regression. She also has some autoimmune tendencies from her dad, which has made me wonder if sustained microglia activation has been contributing to her poor recovery.

      My focus lately has been on whether there is anything that can be done for her at this stage, 3 years post regression. A bumetanide trial does sound sensible.

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    5. Grace, use Chat GPT and give it the exact mutations then input your daughter's case history. Then ask it lots of questions about the likely effects and possible therapy ideas.

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    6. Thanks, Peter. Chat suggested antioxidants to address oxidative stress. Keppra should take care of glutamate modulation, it said.

      I'm still considering an appointment with Dr. Boles, or perhaps Dr. Frye. Do you, or does anyone, know what either doctor's wait times are now?

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    7. When we asked for Dr. Frye's availability, we were told his waiting list for new patients extends to mid 2026.

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    8. I've met with Dr. Frye a handful of times. Here's my sons first pt summary to give you a head start.

      https://drive.google.com/file/d/1AE4conIyx-iSymkkIm5B1QXsS-2Kl2Py/view?usp=drivesdk

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  3. Regarding use of NAC, I'm not sure it would entirely solve the problem (although it might help, especially in pregnancy).

    Mice that were given the antioxidants cysteine and mannitol still showed adverse outcomes after being exposed to acetaminophen/paracetamol. (NAC is a precursor to the cysteine.)

    https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0253543

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    1. Thanks. The pregnancy scenario isn't relevant to me, but it's good to know if it comes up for a friend. My friend's child is 2 and so was able to take ibuprofen post vaccine.

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  4. Stephen, that is really nice of you to share the info from your son’s first appointment with Dr. Frye! I was surprised he gave you the b12/folinic acid shots along with leucoverin. I thought that leucoverin would take care of the folinic acid piece. My son takes b12 and leucoverin but we have not tried combined b12/folinic acid shots. Have you increased leucoverin since this appointment? Also, did the biocidin work? I looked it up and it’s a bit expensive but I will buy it if you found it helpful!
    Thanks!
    Shana

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    1. Hi Shana, we didn't really fine the biocidin helpful. But every ASD kid is different so it might be worth a try. I have gone from extremely high does Leucovorin 200mg/day to 50mg/day. If all you have is the Leucovorin, it will need to be high dose. But if you can use other drugs like bumetanide or omalizumab you can use a lower dose of Leucovorin.

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