Government-funded report dismisses idea of Gulf War syndrome
The Associated Press
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2006

WASHINGTON There is no such thing as Gulf War syndrome, even though
U.S. and foreign veterans of the war report more symptoms of illness
than do soldiers who did not serve in the Persian Gulf, a federally
funded study concludes.

U.S. and foreign veterans of the Gulf War do suffer from an array of
very real problems, according to the Veterans Administration-sponsored
report released Tuesday.

Yet there is no one complex of symptoms to suggest those veterans —
nearly 30 percent of all those who served — suffered or still suffer
from a single identifiable syndrome.

"There's no unique pattern of symptoms. Every pattern identified in
Gulf War veterans also seems to exist in other veterans, though it is
important to note the symptom rate is higher, and it is a serious
issue," said Dr. Lynn Goldman, of Johns Hopkins University, who headed
the Institute of Medicine committee that prepared the report.

The Veterans Administration contracted with the institute, part of the
National Academy of Sciences, to review scientific studies and probe
the issue at the direction of Congress.

Tuesday's report is the latest in the important series, which the
Veterans Administration will rely on to determine whether Gulf War
veterans are eligible for special disability benefits if they are
found to suffer from illnesses that can be linked to their service.

Veterans can now claim those benefits only by making an undiagnosed
illness claim, said Steve Robinson, a Gulf War Army veteran and
government relations director for Veterans for America.

"They keep saying it over and over, every year. We know that — we know
that there is no single thing that made veterans sick. We know this
thing is likely a combination of various exposures," Robinson said in
pushing for new studies he hopes will find what ails tens of thousands
of his fellow vets.

A member of the Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans'
Illnesses, also chartered by Congress, called the report the "first
step" in cataloging the studies done on veterans of the conflict.

"But the most prevalent problems in Gulf War veterans are the
multisymptom illness/Gulf War syndrome-type problems that still affect
a sizable proportion of those who served in the war. I am disappointed
that the IOM report does little to analyze what these studies
collectively tell us about the nature and causes of these conditions,"
said Lea Steele, a Kansas State University epidemiologist who is the
committee's scientific director.

Soldiers who served in the Persian Gulf following the Iraqi invasion
of neighboring Kuwait in August 1990 have reported symptoms that
include fatigue, memory loss, muscle and joint pain, rashes and
difficulty sleeping. But not all suffer from the same array of
symptoms, which has complicated efforts to pinpoint their cause,
according to the report.

Department of Veterans Affairs spokesman Phil Budahn said it would not
comment until it had a chance to study the report. The Veterans of
Foreign Wars of the United States also was reviewing the study.

Nearly 700,000 U.S. soldiers, along with troops from 34 other
countries, took part in the Gulf War. Once in the region, those
soldiers were exposed to a wide array of toxins and other potential
health hazards, including smoke from hundreds of oil well fires,
pesticides, depleted uranium ammunition and possibly the nerve agent
sarin, released during the demolition of a munitions dump.

Inadequate screening of soldiers before deployment in the Gulf War,
coupled with a lack of environmental monitoring during the conflict,
have hindered efforts to determine whether exposure to those
contaminants is linked to any illness, the report also notes.

For years, the government denied the mysterious illnesses were linked
to the war. It now acknowledges that at least some were due to wartime
service. The government is no longer pointing to stress as the likely
reason, as some federally funded studies had suggested.

The new report did find evidence of an elevated risk of the rare nerve
disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called Lou Gehrig's
disease, among Gulf War veterans. They also face an increased risk of
anxiety disorders, depression and substance abuse, it said.

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