Brain damage tied to Gulf War illness
By Kelly Kennedy
USA Today
WASHINGTON — Researchers say they have found physical proof that Gulf War illness is caused by damage to the brain — and that proof ultimately might help civilians who suffer from chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia. Using “functional” MRI machines, the Georgetown University researchers were able to see anomalies in 31 Gulf War veterans in the bundle of nerve fibers in the brain that interpret pain signals. The research was published Wednesday in PLOS ONE journal.
An fMRI is a scan that measures activity by detecting how blood flows through the brain. The findings are “huge,” because an fMRI allows doctors to diagnose a person with Gulf War illness quickly, said James Baraniuk, senior author and professor of medicine at Georgetown University Medical Center. The research, he said, also shows that Gulf War illness is not psychological.
Many veterans have had difficulties getting benefits and treatment for a service-connected condition because doctors assumed they were either faking it or suffering from post-traumatic stress. “That’s a problem with all physicians — VA, military or civilian,” Baraniuk said. “If it doesn’t fall within their small world of known diseases, then the patient is nuts.”
Gulf War illness is a series of symptoms that has affected more than 250,000 veterans of the 1991 war against Iraq in response to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait.
Baraniuk said the correlation of anomalies in the brain’s white matter with Gulf War illness has not been studied before. Researchers, he said, also found that fatigue and pain worsen congruently in the veterans.
John VanMeter, director of Georgetown’s Center for functional and molecular imaging, said they looked in particular at the fibers that process pain. “The fibers in the Gulf War veterans have deteriorated compared to the control,” he said. Those fibers interpret environmental pain, but in the case of the veterans, a tiny pulse of pressure is interpreted as a painful pinch, or normal muscle fatigue from walking a flight of stairs could be interpreted as climbing to the 14th floor. “They get, ‘I’m in pain! I’m in pain! I’m in pain!’ all the time.” The researchers do not know whether the veterans’ symptoms will continue to worsen, though it appears they have from their onset 22 years ago until now. “The guys who were robust and leading the charge on this 10 years ago are now using canes,” Baraniuk said. This research appears to correlate with previous research on Gulf War illness.



John, in 1994, when I went to school at U.T. SW Medical to get my Bachelor Degree in Counseling there was a doctor who gave a lecture that we were able to get in to see even though we weren’t medical students. He was one of the doctors that researched and developed help with the Gulf War Syndrome.
They were involved in helping those with the Gulf War Syndrome and found a treatment that those who also had Heavy Metals in their bodies. It was referred to as “Chelation.” There may still be clinics or your personal doctor who might do this. It is a relatively simple treatment. You sit in a reclining chair for about 2 hrs while mass doses of Vitamin C is pumped through your body….It made a world of difference in many patients’ lives.
This treatment was also given to the women who had the Silicone Implants that ruptured causing them great pain in the joints, and tissue of their bodies.
Something YOU can do for yourself is go to the grocery store and buy the “frozen” Pineapple Juice. Thee is an enzyme in it that helps tremendously for pain and muscle weakness. ONLY DRINK 8 oz a day…NO more than 8 oz.
IF you know of any female veterans, even though they are older, have them pick up “Pre-Natal Vitamins.”
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I was Diagnosed with a brain abnormality that was termed a “laceration” back in 1999 or so after living in constant pain since the early ’90’s, Add that to the spinal injuries, the inability to stand up after waking and move around at all without being completely “worn out,” literally hundreds of skin infections, being diagnosed with PTSD and told the pain is mostly in my head, as well as the inability to climb my stairs 95% of the time…I’m left with one conclusion. I’m screwed!!! …but maybe at least one doc can finally open his eyes! This just has to end! I can’t take much more of this
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Well what do you know!
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