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May-05-2007 00:57TweetFollow @OregonNews Gulf War Vets Suffer Brain ChangesBy Charlene Laino WebMD Medical NewsChanges Correlate With Poor Scores on Memory Tests.
(BOSTON) - Researchers have found signs of structural brain changes in Gulf War veterans with multiple health problems. This comes eight months after a government advisory panel acknowledged that U.S. soldiers who served in Iraq and Kuwait in the early 1990s suffer increased rates of many ailments. Two regions of the brain involved in thinking and memory were significantly smaller in veterans who returned with more than five health problems than in those who had fewer ailments, says study head Roberta White, MD, chairman of environmental health at the Boston University School of Public Health. Furthermore, “these changes correlated with delayed recall and learning on standard memory tests,” she tells WebMD. Robert W. Haley, MD, professor of internal medicine and chief of epidemiology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, says the findings suggest that “there is a loss of brain cells due to a toxic effect of pesticides and nerve gas, which then causes brain volume shrinkage.” Haley was not involved with the work, presented here at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology. Gulf War Veterans Suffer Plethora of Ills Last September, experts convened by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) said they could find no evidence of a 'Gulf War syndrome,' striking a blow to veterans who maintain that exposures to pesticides, weapons residues, or other chemicals caused a set of symptoms unique to their service in Operation Desert Storm. But the IOM did affirm that combat veterans are more likely to have many individual ailments, including fatiguefatigue, joint pain, memory loss, severe headaches, and respiratory and skin ailments, which interfered with normal daily activities. The new study included 36 vets of the war. Half returned with five or more of these symptoms, and half had fewer symptoms. All the participants had their brains scanned with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Vets With Smaller Brain Volume Have Worse Recall The brain scans showed that the cortex -- a region responsible for processing thought, perception, and memory, among other things -- was 5% smaller in vets in the high-symptom group than in the low-symptom group. Additionally, the rostral anterior cingulate gyrus -- an area related to logical thought -- was 6% smaller in the high-symptom group than in the low-symptom group. The researchers also found that the smaller the brain volume in those areas, the worse the veterans performed on standard memory and recall tests. ‘Something Happened to Gulf War Vets' Brains’ “These are really important findings given that the IOM has stated that the Gulf War syndrome is imaginary and has no physical basis,” White says. “When you combine these findings with greater rates of ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease) in the vets, it is pretty clear something happened to the Gulf War veterans’ brains and we’re just beginning to see what these effects are,” she says. Several studies suggest that serving in the first Gulf War doubles veterans' risk of the rare, fatal brain ailment ALS. “It took us 20 years to find out about Agent Orange and the Vietnam War. Now, 16 years later, we are beginning to find out about central nervous system ailments in Gulf War veterans,” White says. SOURCES: American Academy of Neurology 59th Annual Meeting, Boston, April 29-May 5, 2007. Roberta White, MD, chairman of environmental health, Boston University School of Public Health. Robert W. Haley, MD, professor of internal medicine, chief of epidemiology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas. Articles for May 4, 2007 | Articles for May 5, 2007 | Articles for May 6, 2007 | Support Salem-News.com: googlec507860f6901db00.html | |
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Rosensweig May 7, 2007 6:22 pm (Pacific time)
Rottenburger, I hope that your wife, children and grandchildren are not the same kind of demented trash as you. Everything I have seen you write is as if you have all the answers. Are you God? Let out your frustrations in the bathroom with a Kleenex; you seem backed-up.
Rosenberg May 7, 2007 12:07 pm (Pacific time)
Hank that took courage for you to admit your "consequence". Good for you!
Hank Ruark May 7, 2007 8:46 am (Pacific time)
To all: Devastating damages-done may well show up in vet's response re citizen-problems for many years... Heavy costs like this are penalty-paid for allowing such situations ever to occur in our "modern" world. May even detect consequence in Comments right here...!!
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