Donate for PTSD
Donate - PTSD Forum is quite costly to run, maintain and improve. All donations are appreciated.
New To PTSD Forum
FAQ's - All you need to know contained in Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ).
PTSD Forum Extra's
PTSD Forms - PTSD Forum provide a PTSD assessment and self analysis form.

PTSD Learning - Contains some PTSD learning information and presentations.
Recommendation
Firefox Browser PTSD Forum recommends the use of Firefox Browser with Search Status add-on, plus your countries relevant English dictionary add-on. This enables forum members to spell check and remove typical toolbars from their browser.

Go Back   PTSD Forum > Break The Ice > World PTSD News
Register Blogs FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Notices

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 14-09-2006, 04:10 PM
anthony's Avatar
anthony anthony is offline Gender Male
Administrative Editor PTSD
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 7,283
Blog Entries: 9
anthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud of
Default Panel Denies Soldiers in Kuwait Suffer from Gulf War Syndrome

A US government advisory panel said this week that it could find no evidence of a "Gulf War Syndrome" afflicting US soldiers who served in Kuwait and Iraq in the early 1990s, though it did affirm that combat veterans do suffer increased rates of many individual ailments. The conclusion was a blow to veterans who maintain that exposures to pesticides, weapons residues, or other chemicals they encountered while fighting in Kuwait and pushing the Iraqi forces out of the country caused a set of symptoms unique to their service during Operation Desert Storm. The symptoms included fatigue, memory loss, severe headaches, and respiratory and skin ailments, which interfered with normal daily activities.

Those symptoms and others have penetrated the American lexicon as "Gulf War Syndrome." But experts convened by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) said that their review of 850 studies shows it doesn't exist.

While studies show that Gulf War veterans are at higher risk than nondeployed soldiers for a variety of illnesses, "the results of that research indicate that ... there is not a unique symptom complex (or syndrome) in deployed Gulf War veterans," the report stated.

Congress and the Veterans Administration rely in part on IOM to determine compensation levels for various illnesses. The VA has resisted calls to classify Gulf War symptoms as a service-connected syndrome. Tuesday's conclusions appear to make it less likely that soldiers will be able to prove to the government's satisfaction that their symptoms are a result of service in Iraq and therefore deserving of full compensation.

The Pentagon began ordering soldiers to undergo health evaluations before deployment in the 1990s after complaints about a Gulf War syndrome first surfaced. But earlier studies usually lacked control groups or measures of soldiers' health before the war - factors researchers consider vital to understanding the cause of disease.

Thirty per cent of Gulf War veterans complain of some form of "multisymptom" illness, often including fatigue, depression, anxiety, pain, or gastrointestinal problems. About half as many nondeployed veterans complain of those symptoms, according to the report.

Complaints of respiratory and cardiovascular symptoms, while more frequent in combat veterans, were not generally borne out by heart and lung function tests. "They're not different from the symptoms deployed people have. They just report them at a higher rate," Lynn R. Goldman, M.D., who chaired the panel that issued the report, said. "There is not particular constellation of symptoms that's unique to Gulf War vets," says Goldman, a professor at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

The report did validate the higher rates of depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress, and substance abuse often seen in combat veterans and those with prolonged service in battle theatres.

Still, the results angered some Gulf War activists. Joyce Riley, spokeswoman for the American Gulf War Veterans Association, called the report "one more blow" for soldiers returned from the war. That group and others maintain that as many as 150,000 Gulf War veterans suffer from disabling symptoms unique to their service in Iraq and Kuwait but that full compensation remains out of reach.

Riley called the debate over a definition of Gulf War syndrome "meaningless." "Are they sick, or are they not sick," says Riley, a former Air Force captain who served in the Gulf War.

Some studies have found increased rates of birth defects in children of soldiers, though results are inconsistent. Of defects that have been observed, urinary tract abnormalities are the most consistent, the report said.

The report also cited studies linking Gulf War service to a few diseases, including the rare but fatal nerve disorder ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. Some troops also showed evidence of confusion, memory loss, and headaches, which is consistent with symptoms of exposure to sarin, a nerve agent used in chemical weapons that were destroyed by U.S. forces during the war, the findings stated.

Experts urged the department to perform follow-up studies on possible ALS, birth defects, some cancers, and a suspected higher rate of motor vehicle deaths in Gulf War veterans. "There definitely are some signals there that need to be tracked over time," Goldman says.

Source: WebMD

Last edited by anthony; 26-09-2006 at 12:54 AM.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks
Digg del.icio.us StumbleUpon Google

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are Off
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off