Important
information about medical and legal issues of particular concern
to U.S. Military veterans.
(Information on this
page is deemed reliable but not guaranteed, and should not be regarded
or construed as actual medical or legal advice.)
Gulf War syndrome
is the name given to a variety of psychological and physical symptoms
suffered by veterans of the Gulf War. The symptoms have been
remarkably wide-ranging, sometimes somewhat ill-defined, and
distinguished by the number of theories advanced as to their origin.
Various causes of Gulf
War Syndrome have been suggested:
- Depleted uranium
poisoning
- The side-effects of
drugs given for protection against nerve agents
- Autoimmune diseases
induced by squalene, an adjuvant used in anthrax vaccines to speed
up the development of anthrax immunity.
- Parasites
- Biological or chemical
weapons whose use has not been disclosed or discovered
- Fumes from oil well
fires
- Aspartame poisoning.
Large quantities of aspartame sweetened diet soft drinks were
provided to Gulf War troops, often times sitting in high temperature
conditions. This artificial sweetener breaks down at roughly 85 °F
(29.5 °C) into, among other things, methanol, formaldehyde, diketopiperazine and formic acid.
In November, 2004, an
independent British study concluded, for the first time, that
thousands of UK and US Gulf War veterans were made ill by their
service. The report concluded Gulf veterans were twice as likely to
suffer from ill health than if they had been deployed elsewhere. It
concluded the illnesses suffered were the result of a combination of
causes. These included multiple injections of vaccines, the use of
organophosphate pesticides to spray tents, low level exposure to nerve
gas, and the inhalation of depleted uranium dust.
The study is the first to
suggest a direct link between military service in the Gulf and
illnesses suffered by veterans of that war and directly contradicts
previous theories which had suggested GWS was not a physical illness,
but a response to the stresses of war. Similar syndromes have been
seen as an after effect of many conflicts - for example, 'shell shock'
after World War I, and post-traumatic stress disorder after the
Vietnam War. If this were true, the unfortunate effect is that the
psychologically based therapy that might help support those affected
in their very real distress, is neglected in favour of a futile search
for a non-existent physical cause: and repeated studies where a
particular cause is found to be unconnected become regarded as further
evidence for a cover-up by the authorities.
Another possibility is
that some or all of the symptoms experienced are unrelated to service
in the Gulf. A study for the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence found
no correlation between service in the Gulf and death from illness.
Although not identifying
Gulf War syndrome by name, in June of 2003 the High Court of England
and Wales upheld a claim by Shaun Rusling that the depression, eczema,
fatigue, nausea and breathing problems that he experienced after
returning from the Gulf War were attributed to his military service.
A 2004 British study
comparing 24,000 Gulf War veterans to a control group of 18,000 men
found that those who had taken part in the Gulf war have lower
fertility and are 40 to 50% more likely to be unable to start a
pregnancy. Among Gulf war soldiers, failure to conceive was 2.5% vs.
1.7% in the control group, and the rate of miscarriage was 3.4% vs.
2.3%. These differences are small but statistically significant.
In January 2006, a study led by Melvin Blanchard and published by the
Journal of Epidemiology, part of the "National Health Survey of
Gulf War-Era Veterans and Their Families", stated that veterans
deployed in the Persian Gulf War had nearly twice the prevalence of
chronic multisymptom illness (CMI), a cluster of symptoms similar to a
set of conditions often called Gulf War Syndrome.
Iraq War
Many U.S.
veterans of the 2003 Iraq War have reported a range of serious health
issues, including tumors, daily blood in urine and stool, sexual
dysfunction, migraines, frequent muscle spasms, and other symptoms
similar to the debilitating symptoms of "Gulf War Syndrome" reported
by many veterans of the 1991 Gulf War, which some believe is related
to the continued United States' use of radioactive depleted uranium
(Associated Press, August 12, 2006).
Relationship between
Gulf War Syndrome and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
The symptoms of Gulf War
Syndrome are remarkably similar to those associated with Multiple
Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) leading some to believe that they are
related. This similarity, and the fact that there is no medical test
that will diagnose either (because of a lack of coherent symptoms and
lack of a clear definition), has led most experts to conclude that
neither illness is physical but purely psychosomatic. Others, mostly
adherents of alternative medicine, believe that the cause of the
illness is physical, although as yet unidentifiable, and that it will
eventually be pinpointed, leading to the legitimisation of the illness
and the development of successful treatments. This has occurred with
asthma, allergies, repetitive strain injury and many other previously
'dubious' complaints. However, asthma, allergies, and RSI have
distinct and identifiable symptoms, which the Gulf War Syndrome and
MCS have not. Also, the symptoms of asthma and allergies remain the
same in double-blind tests, while the symptoms of MCS disappear in
test where the subject is unaware of exposure to suspected substances.
Veterans
Advantage
Are you, or a
family member, a U.S. Veteran, Active Duty, National Guard or Reservist?
If so, then you are eligible for the VA Card program. VA Card members are entitled to benefits that recognize service to our
country - over $20,000 in benefits - from
more than 50 leading companies, including Allied Van Lines, Amtrak,
Apple, Avis, Best Western Hotels, Club Med, Continental Airlines, Dell,
DIRECTV, Greyhound, Hertz, Hyatt, Starwood Luxury Hotels, Target.com, XM
Satellite Radio and many more.
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