Study demonstrates vaccines safety, lack of link to autism New research finds no evidence that thimerosal-containing vaccines cause negative behaviors or result in neuropathology in infant primates, according to a study (PDF) published in PNAS, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In the study, infant rhesus macaques received several pediatric vaccines containing thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, in a schedule similar to that given to infants in the 1990s. Other animals received just the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine, which does not contain thimerosal, or an expanded vaccine schedule similar to that recommended for U.S. infants today. Control animals received a saline injection. Regardless of vaccination status, all animals developed normal social behaviors; the administration of vaccines to rhesus macaques did not result in neuropathological abnormalities or aberrant behaviors such as those often observed in autism. Cellular analysis of the cerebellum, amygdala and hippocampus three brain regions known to be altered in autism was similar in vaccinated and unvaccinated animals. This comprehensive study included many physiological measures and behavioral measures. Fundamentally the vaccines had no ill effects, said Gene Sackett, UW professor emeritus of psychology and director of the lab work at the Washington National Primate Research Center. To the extent that macaques mirror human physiology, I think this bears out what most people have known: These vaccines are safe.